Michele Maatouk Sharecast News
04 Oct, 2024 13:55 04 Oct, 2024 15:08

Non-farm payrolls beat expectations, unemployment rate dips

jerome powell dl fed chairman us usa bonds dollar
US Federal Reserve chairman, Jerome PowellFederal Reserve

The US economy added far more jobs than expected in September while the unemployment rate unexpectedly fell, dashing any expectations of a potential 50 basis points rate cut by the Federal Reserve next month.

Figures released by the Labor Department showed that total non-farm payrolls rose by 254,000 from August, versus expectations for a 140,000 increase. The figure for August, meanwhile, was revised up to a 159,000 gain from 142,000.

The unemployment rate fell to 4.1% in September from 4.2% the month before. Economists were expecting it to be unchanged.

The data also showed that wage growth ticked up to 4% year-on-year from 3.9% in August. On a monthly basis, wages were up 0.4%, in line with August.

Paul Ashworth, chief North America economist at Capital Economics, said: "Looking at the labour market strength evident in September’s Employment Report, the real debate at the Fed should be about whether to loosen monetary policy at all. Any hopes of a 50bp cut are long gone. We continue to expect the Fed to take a more measured approach - cutting rates by 25bp at each meeting until the policy rate is down to between 3.00% and 3.25%."

Mahmoud Alkudsi, senior market analyst at ADSS, said: "Today’s promising data could suggest that heavy-handed slashing of interest rates provided some rigidity to a somewhat fragile jobs market.

"With data coming in significantly stronger than anticipated, the Fed is likely to continue cutting rates at a slow and steady pace, with a 25-basis-point reduction in the November meeting being the most probable outcome.

"This scenario may prompt investors to scale back their excessive expectations of a near 70-basis-point cut by year-end, which could offer short-term support for the US dollar, while posing more challenging conditions for the recently volatile equity markets."

contador