A Payrolls Gain of 310,000 Jobs in April Will Further Rattle Global Markets
A perfectly balanced U.S. job market has provided a soft landing but the resulting Higher for Longer narrative and its inevitable evolution into Higher Forever is sending shockwaves around the world.
It’s been another turbulent week as U.S. and global markets continue to begrudgingly adjust to the new Higher for Longer environment we’re in. And as we noted last week, given the balanced state of both the U.S. economy and the job market, we expect the upheaval to continue for some time as the overarching narrative slowly (or maybe not so slowly) migrates from Higher for Longer to Higher Forever.
That broader, evolving narrative around the Fed’s pivot, along with its shockwave rippling around the world, is being almost entirely driven by the persistent, underlying strength of the U.S. job market that’s been powered by the growing, and now perfect, equilibrium between labor demand and labor supply.
As the chart above indicates, we’ve come into this balanced state only recently.
Going back three years or so to the beginning of 2021, it took about a year for employers to sufficiently raise their ‘bids’ to bring enough people back to work to allow them to start overcoming the labor component of the supply shock that rocked the economy as the country emerged from the pandemic.
It then took roughly another two years to fully resolve the massive demand-supply imbalance in the job market, but we eventually did just that and in doing so, wage inflation and then broader inflation subsided and unemployment stayed below 4% throughout - which brings us to where we find ourselves today. As we noted last week:
From our perspective, this is the new, post-pandemic normal. The soft landing has occurred (arguably, it did so nearly a year ago) and we’ve most assuredly arrived at the final destination. There is nowhere else to go.
Inflation has come down as far as it’s going to for a whole host of reasons and every other aspect of the economy is operating at a level where ~3% inflation is (or least should be) totally acceptable. Consumers are adjusting, businesses are adjusting, and even the markets are adjusting (albeit with some pain and serious gnashing of teeth).
Eventually the Fed, too, will adjust, make no mistake.
Having arrived in this most harmonious place, the U.S. has added a net gain of 830,000 jobs since January, 30% above consensus estimates but not surprising to some.
But as glorious as this destination is proving to be for the economy and the country as a whole, it’s causing ample consternation in the markets (along with a massive goldbug hatch). That consternation is sure to get dialed up a notch or two on Friday when the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reports a net gain of 310,000 jobs in April.
Given the lag between our job openings data and the resulting job gains when those openings are filled with new hires, our April NFP forecast is based on our March data. And based on our April data, detailed below, perhaps the markets will settle down a bit with May’s jobs report.
So with that, in April, total U.S. jobs indexed directly from company websites around the world fell 2% to 4.9M jobs, while new jobs fell roughly 5% and removed jobs stayed flat.
Similarly, the LinkUp 10,000 - a metric that tracks total U.S. job openings from the 10,000 global employers with the most openings in the U.S., fell just under 2%.
New job openings by state fell across much of the country with the largest decreases in Alaska (-20%), Mississippi (-19%) and Georgia (-13%).
For the month, labor demand in manufacturing was flat while labor demand in services fell slightly.
Industries showing the largest declines in openings were Professional Services (-11%), Retail-General Merchandise (-10%), and Transportation/Warehouse (-8%).
Labor demand for blue and white collar jobs fell 2% and 1% respectively.
The largest gains by occupation were seen in Construction (6%) and Legal (5%), and the largest declines were seen in Business & Financial Ops (-8%) and Farm/Forest/Fish/Hunt (-8%).
In April, Closed Duration, which essentially measures Time-to-Fill or Hiring Velocity across the entire economy, feel back down to 44 days after jumping up in March. Closed Duration is a highly useful metric that measures Time-to-Fill based on the number of days an opening, on average, is open on a company’s corporate career portal before it is closed and removed.
The rolling 90-day average for Closed Duration dropped in both manufacturing and services.
Similarly, the rolling 90-day average for Closed Duration for both white-collar and blue-collar jobs dropped sharply.
Based on our data from March, we are forecasting a net gain of 310,000 jobs in April, well above the consensus estimates of 240,000 jobs.
If the past few weeks are any indication, we could be in for even more serious tremors on Friday.
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