Weekly Market Update
There was a mix of tricks and treats during a busy week of labor, housing and inflation data.
Job Growth Stalls in October
Private Sector Job Growth Surges, Wages Moderate
JOLTS, Jobless Claims Show Labor Sector Weakness
Consumer Inflation Making Progress
Big Jump in Pending Home Sales
Home Prices Hit Another High
Third Quarter GDP Solid but Below Forecasts
Family Hack of the Week
What to Look for This Week
Technical Picture
There was a mix of tricks and treats during a busy week of labor, housing and inflation data. Here are the latest headlines:
Job Growth Stalls in October
Private Sector Job Growth Surges, Wages Moderate
JOLTS, Jobless Claims Show Labor Sector Weakness
The latest Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) showed that job openings fell to 7.443 million in August, which was below forecasts and well below the high of 12 million hit in 2022. The quit rate remained at a low 1.9%. A low quit rate suggests there is less poaching from other companies and fewer people feel confident about finding new employment.
Regarding unemployment, 216,000 Initial Jobless Claims were filed in the latest week, marking a decline of 12,000 from the previous week. Plus, 1.862 million people continued to receive benefits after filing their initial claim. Continuing Claims have now topped 1.8 million for 21 consecutive weeks.
What’s the bottom line? We continue to see less hiring, fewer people quitting their jobs, and elevated continuing unemployment claims. Labor sector reports are crucial to the Fed as they weigh monetary policy and further rate cuts, given their dual mandate of price stability and maximum employment.
Consumer Inflation Making Progress
Big Jump in Pending Home Sales
Home Prices Hit Another High
Third Quarter GDP Solid but Below Forecasts
The U.S. economy grew by 2.8% in the third quarter per the Bureau of Economic Analysis, which was a solid but somewhat disappointing Gross Domestic Product reading given that forecasts expected higher growth. By comparison, we saw 3% and 1.6% growth in the second and first quarters of this year.
What’s the bottom line? Economic activity in the third quarter was driven by consumer spending, exports and federal government spending. Note that this report was an advanced estimate and the data is subject to revisions when the second and final readings are released on November 27 and December 20, respectively.
What to Look for This Week
The Fed’s 2-day meeting begins Wednesday, with their Monetary Policy Statement and press conference following Thursday afternoon. We’ll also see more home price appreciation data, while the latest Jobless Claims will be reported on Thursday.
Technical Picture
Mortgage Bonds ended last week trading in the lower bound of a very wide range between support at 98.73 and overhead resistance at the 200-day Moving Average. The 10-year broke above a critical ceiling at the 4.322% Fibonacci level and has plenty of room to move higher until the next ceiling at 4.5%.