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US economy added only 12,000 jobs in October in shock pre-election drop – business live

US economy added only 12,000 jobs in October in shock pre-election drop – business live

US economy added only 12,000 jobs in October according to shock numbers

The US economy added far fewer jobs than expected in October, in a shock reading that will raise questions about its momentum days before the presidential election.

Only 12,000 jobs were added in the month, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, far below economists expectations of 113,000, and the 254,000 in September.

Key events

What have we learned from the US jobs numbers? It’s tricky to say.

Lara Castleton, US head of portfolio construction and strategy at Janus Henderson Investors, said it was “an underwhelming and muddying jobs report just five days before an election”. There was no clear signal because of the hurricanes.

There will likely not be much influence from this report on the results of next week nor on the Fed’s interest rate decision later in the month, which will likely be 25-basis-points cut amidst this backdrop.

James Knightley, chief international economist for the US at ING, an investment bank, said the number was “depressed by strike action and hurricane disruption”.

Nonetheless, the trend in hiring is obviously slowing and with the inflation backdrop looking less threatening, the Federal Reserve clearly has scope to move policy closer to neutral.

Given the inflation backdrop is less threatening and the Fed is putting more emphasis on jobs, today’s report cements expectations for a 25bp Fed rate cut next week. We expect that to be followed up by another 25bp rate cut in December.

Wall Street has opened higher. Share prices were likely helped by expectations of looser monetary policy from the Federal Reserve after surprisingly weak jobs numbers.

Here are the opening snaps, via Reuters:

  • S&P 500 UP 23.42 POINTS, OR 0.41%, AT 5,728.87

  • NASDAQ UP 93.71 POINTS, OR 0.52%, AT 18,188.86

  • DOW JONES UP 199.46 POINTS, OR 0.48%, AT 41,962.92

London tube engineer strikes called off after improved pay offer

Back in the UK, the RMT union has suspended tube strikes due to start today after what it called a “significantly improved offer” from Transport for London.

Engineering staff represented by RMT were due to stop work for 24 hours from 6pm today.

However, the separate Aslef union has not called off its action. Train operators and managerial employees are due to strike on 7 and 12 November.

An RMT spokesperson said:

Following intense negotiations with London Underground management and a significantly improved offer, we have suspended the strikes scheduled to start this evening.

London Underground have sensibly abandoned their proposed changes to pay structures which now means all our members will receive the same value in any pay award.

Further discussions will take place next week regarding the pay offer but progress has been made which would not have been possible without the fortitude and industrial strength of our 10,000 members on London Underground.

*This post has been updated to reflect the fact that Aslef has not called off its strike action.

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The jobs numbers prompted a rapid fall in the yield on US Treasury bonds. The yield on the 10-year benchmark dropped 10 basis points (0.1 percentage points) in the immediate aftermath of the data.

Perceptions of a weaker US economy will make the Federal Reserve more likely to lower interest rates next week. That would boost the relative value of bonds. (Yields dropping means prices are rising.)

It’s something of a side issue given the context of the US election, but the drop in yields has also affected UK debt. The yield on 10-year gilts has dropped below 4.4% – wiping out all of Thursday’s post-budget move.

The US dollar has weakened after the shock drop in non-farm payrolls.

The dollar is down by 0.3% against a trade-weighted basket of currencies after initially climbing over the course of today. The pound is now up 0.5% today against the greenback, while the euro is up 0.1%.

You can see the immediate reaction on this chart showing the performance of the dollar basket today:

The US dollar dropped sharply after jobs figures fell far short of expectations. Photograph: Refinitiv

Economics professor Justin Wolfers of University of Michigan says that the underlying trend is of slower growth in jobs, but not a signal of a disastrous economic situation.

Hurricane-afflicted jobs numbers are out.

Payrolls grew 12k, about 100k below expectations.
Unemployment stayed steady at 4.1%.

As a guess, hurricanes cost about -40k jobs, and the Boeing strike also cost -40k jobs. So *underlying* jobs growth was slower but still reasonable. pic.twitter.com/rvFNmMUP0C

— Justin Wolfers (@JustinWolfers) November 1, 2024

To put this all in perspective: Underlying payrolls growth of +131k is pretty much what we would hope for in the final stages of the soft landing.

You can see this the unemployment numbers, which have been remarkably stable even as inflation plummeted. pic.twitter.com/EKbnSRsZGw

— Justin Wolfers (@JustinWolfers) November 1, 2024

But the headline is nevertheless still a long way below any recent readings thanks to the strikes and hurricanes.

The US unemployment rate remained steady at 4.1%, but it is the non-farm payrolls number that will take up all the attention.

Only 12,000 jobs were added – which will surely be seized on by Donald Trump in the last few days of campaigning ahead of the presidential election. A miss in the forecasts of that magnitude – more than 100,000 jobs – is rare.

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) added the important caveat that the jobs reading is the first since Hurricanes Helene and Milton hit the US. The BLS said:

It is likely that payroll employment estimates in some industries were affected by the hurricanes; however, it is not possible to quantify the net effect on the over-the-month change in national employment, hours, or earnings estimates because the establishment survey is not designed to isolate effects from extreme weather events. There was no discernible effect on the national unemployment rate from the household survey.

It also added that “Employment declined in manufacturing due to strike activity” – a reference to the ongoing strike at Boeing in particular.

US economy added only 12,000 jobs in October according to shock numbers

The US economy added far fewer jobs than expected in October, in a shock reading that will raise questions about its momentum days before the presidential election.

Only 12,000 jobs were added in the month, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, far below economists expectations of 113,000, and the 254,000 in September.

Tens of millions of Americans have already voted, but we will shortly receive the last big economic update before the US presidential election next Tuesday: non-farm payrolls.

The jobs numbers are a key measure of the US economy, but this month they could be affected by the huge strike at Boeing and the effects of a hurricane hitting Florida.

Whatever the noise, the figures will help to set the narrative for the next day or two as the election campaign enters its most frantic stage.

Bob Savage, head of markets strategy and insights at BNY Mellon, a US investment bank, said:

US October non-farm payrolls expected 110,000 after 254,000 with hurricane and strike noise. The unemployment rate expected steady at 4.1% and the average hourly earnings flat at 4% year-on-year.

Reuters’s poll of economists suggests that the reading will be 113,000, down from 254,000 in September.

A quick check-in on gilt markets: the Labour government will have been eyeing developments nervously after some movement this week, but so far on Friday things have been fairly steady.

The yield on the UK 10-year bond has dropped to 4.42%, down from a high of 4.51% during London trading hours and two basis points (0.02 percentage points) below yesterday’s close. Yields move inversely to prices, so falling yields is a sign of investors buying bonds, after Thursday’s selloff.

The 30-year yield has also dropped by a basis point, while the short-term two-year gilt is down four basis points in today’s trading.

The pound is up by 0.2% against the US dollar, and 0.3% against the euro.

Shreyas Gopal, a strategist at Deutsche Bank, said that the budget should be net positive for the pound, because it will likely make the Bank of England more hawkish – more likely to keep interest rates higher for longer.

Our economist’s base case for next week is that the BoE now retains its language around cuts being “gradual.”

Higher policy rates for longer, driven by a demand stimulus that lifts growth and inflation, ought to be positive for the pound in the current market environment.

The sun rises over oil rigs at the shore of the Caspian Sea off of Baku, Azerbaijan, in a file photo from 1998. Photograph: Sergei Grits/AP

America’s two oil giants reported combined profits of more than $13bn (£10bn) for the third quarter as higher production volumes made up for weaker prices.

ExxonMobil made $8.6bn, while Chevron made $4.5bn. Both beat analyst forecasts.

ExxonMobil said it had produced the most oil for a quarter in over 40 years, at 3.2m barrels per day. Chevron said its oil output rose 7% compared with last year thanks to record production in the US, including the West Texas Permian Basin.

Slower global economies have dragged down oil prices in recent months – despite the turmoil in the Middle East and Ukraine. That has hit oil company profits this year, but there is little sign of them slowing down.

Both companies and their rivals have expanded production in the face of warnings from forecasters such as the International Energy Agency that exploration for new oil and gas wells must cease if the world is to hit climate targets to limit global heating to 2 degrees Celsius.