View RSS Feed

1Finance

Non-Farm Employment Change forecast from Goldman Sachs, Barclays, Deutsche Bank, RBS

Rate this Entry
by , 06-05-2015 at 09:48 AM (1403 Views)
      
   
Name:  777.jpg
Views: 220
Size:  97.1 KB


Goldman Sachs:
  • The employment components of various manufacturing surveys have been weak (Dallas Fed manufacturing survey, Chicago PMI & the ISM services report)
  • Mining sector job losses may persist and continue to be a drag
  • GS say that the consensus forecast has overestimated jobs growth in May for the last few years, by 56,000 on average over the previous 5 years
  • Warm weather likely inflated the jobs number in April, but this may have taken from jobs gains in May

Barclays:
  • Expect nonfarm payrolls to rise by 225k
  • Private payrolls to increase by 220k
  • Government payrolls to grow by 5k
  • They note initial and continuing claims both fell sharply in May from April

Deutsche Bank:
  • Say that jobless claims are hovering near a 15-year low
  • The growth rate of employee tax withholding receipts has meaningfully increased from the April to May employment survey periods (up about 5.6% in May compared to less than 4% in April)

RBS:
  • Expect average hourly earnings growth to rise from 2.2% to 2.3% y/y
  • Which would equal the largest y/y increase since 2009
  • Expect unemployment rate steady at 5.4%
  • Stronger-than-expected employment should keep the Fed on pace to hike the Fed Funds rate in September, and pulling forward of expectations could support the USD. A stronger USD and pulled-forward rate hike expectations could pressure commodity prices and weigh on commodity exporter currencies


the source

Submit "Non-Farm Employment Change forecast from Goldman Sachs, Barclays, Deutsche Bank, RBS" to Google Submit "Non-Farm Employment Change forecast from Goldman Sachs, Barclays, Deutsche Bank, RBS" to del.icio.us Submit "Non-Farm Employment Change forecast from Goldman Sachs, Barclays, Deutsche Bank, RBS" to Digg Submit "Non-Farm Employment Change forecast from Goldman Sachs, Barclays, Deutsche Bank, RBS" to reddit

Comments