As a week of big labor market readouts unfold, the reasons for heightened easing speculation are clear.
Following another dour update on contracting manufacturing activity on Tuesday, Wednesday’s data showed U.S. job openings dropped to a 3-1/2-year low in July.
Even though those numbers are for the month before this week’s critical August employment report, the Fed’s latest ‘Beige Book’ economic update described the jobs market as “generally flat to up slightly in recent weeks”, and the stakes are rising.
The ratio of job openings to job seekers is basically back to pre-pandemic levels.
Private sector jobs data and updates on layoffs for August as well as weekly jobless claims numbers are all due later on Thursday.
That the Fed is now watching these as a priority is not in doubt and San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly told Reuters late on Wednesday that the Fed needs to cut to keep the labor market healthy.
“As inflation falls, we’ve got a real rate of interest that’s rising into a slowing economy; that’s a basic recipe for over-tightening,” Daly said in an interview.
Atlanta Fed boss Raphael Bostic said he was now giving equal attention to the Fed’s maximum employment mandate as he is to inflation. “We must not maintain a restrictive policy stance for too long,” he said.
All of which may reasonably unnerve the stock market, but the Atlanta Fed’s own real time ‘GDPNow’ growth model shows the economy still growing at more than 2% during the current quarter. Service sector surveys for August are due later on Thursday and are likely to give a better picture of activity than the factory readings earlier in the week.