Weekly Market Update
Despite strong headline job gains reported for November, there are signs of underlying weakness in the labor sector. Meanwhile, home prices continue to appreciate on an annual basis. Read on for these top stories and more.
Strong Headline Jobs Report but Underlying Weakness
Private Sector Job Growth Below Forecasts, Pay Gains Accelerate
Deeper Look at Uptick in October’s Job Openings
Low Fire, Low Hire Trend Lingers
Annual Home Price Growth Continues
Strong Headline Jobs Report but Underlying Weakness
Private Sector Job Growth Below Forecasts, Pay Gains Accelerate
Deeper Look at Uptick in October’s Job Openings
The latest Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) showed that job openings rose from a downwardly revised 7.37 million in September to 7.74 million in October, which was above what economists had forecasted. The hiring rate fell to 3.3%, which is the lowest level since 2013 not including COVID. The quit rate increased from 1.9% to 2.1%, bouncing slightly higher from the lowest level since 2015 excluding COVID.
What’s the bottom line? While the increase in job openings was unexpected and above estimates, the total may be weaker than the data implies, as the rise in remote work has led to job listings being posted in multiple states more frequently. Plus, a low quit rate also suggests there is less poaching from other companies and fewer people feel confident about finding new employment.
In addition, the job openings to unemployment ratio (which compares the number of job openings to the number of unemployed persons) is at 1.1. This is a big decline from the peak above 2 in 2022 and shows a labor market that is cooling.
Low Fire, Low Hire Trend Lingers
Initial Jobless Claims rose 9,000 in the latest week, with 224,000 people filing for unemployment benefits for the first time. However, Continuing Claims fell by 25,000, as 1.871 million people are still receiving benefits after filing their initial claim. Despite this most recent decline, Continuing Claims remain elevated, now topping 1.8 million for the 26th week in a row.
What’s the bottom line? The low fire, low hire trend remains persistent, as employers continue to hold on to their workers while also slowing down their pace of hiring. This was also reflected in the latest Job Cuts report from Challenger, Gray & Christmas, which showed that hiring announcements fell to their lowest year-to-date level since 2015.
Annual Home Price Growth Continues
CoreLogic’s Home Price Index showed that home prices nationwide rose 0.02% in October, which was stronger than forecasts. Prices were also 3.4% higher when compared to October of last year. CoreLogic forecasts that home prices will fall 0.03% in November and rise 2.4% in the year going forward, though their forecasts tend to be conservative.
What’s the bottom line? CoreLogic’s appreciation data has been weaker than Case-Shiller’s, which is considered the gold standard in tracking changes in residential real estate values. For example, Case-Shiller’s latest report showed that home values nationwide were 3.9% higher in September than a year earlier, while the Federal Housing Finance Agency also reported 4.4% annual growth over that same period.
In addition, the fall usually brings less competition in the housing market because families with school-age children like to be settled ahead of a new school year. While this season is typically the softest for home price growth, these reports show that appreciation remains healthy overall.
What to Look for This Week
The Fed will be watching crucial inflation data when the Consumer Price Index for November is reported on Wednesday. The Producer Price Index, which measures wholesale inflation, follows on Thursday along with the latest Jobless Claims.
Technical Picture
Mortgage Bonds ended last week above their 100-day Moving Average. If Bonds can stay above this ceiling, there is a lot of room to the upside. The 10-year ended last week below its 50-day Moving Average, and near the next floor at the 4.126% Fibonacci level.