June nonfarm payrolls rise 121,000, Unemployment rate steady at 4.6%

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Oct 30, 2004
11,442
32
91

I predict that GM will end up filing for bankruptcy. My understanding is that GM sold off part of GMAC--which was profitable--so that it could have some cash. If the Delphi workers strike and force GM to honor some earlier contracts to them, that might be enough to push GM over the edge.

 

jlmadyson

Platinum Member
Aug 13, 2004
2,201
0
0
Originally posted by: brandonbull
Perfect. McJobs up and real buying power down.

Little more diverse than all the so called McJobs;

The employment report showed that construction companies added 7,000 jobs in March. Retailers expanded employment by 29,000 positions. Financial companies added 16,000 jobs. Education and health care boosted payrolls by 33,000 and the government by 24,000.
 

Acanthus

Lifer
Aug 28, 2001
19,915
2
76
ostif.org
Originally posted by: conjur
Originally posted by: shadow9d9
Originally posted by: jlmadyson
Originally posted by: Genx87
This looks like great news imo.

Markets agree so far, for today:

DJ

NASDAQ

S&P 500


If you actually followed the market you'd know that 1. The entire week was a disaster. 2. Not much besides the dow went up today.
And the NASDAQ since the Propagandist took office?

January 22, 2001: 2,757.91
Today: 2,262.04


-18%

Uhh a stock market crash in sept of 2001 might have something to do with that...
 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: conjur
Originally posted by: shadow9d9
Originally posted by: jlmadyson
Originally posted by: Genx87
This looks like great news imo.

Markets agree so far, for today:

DJ

NASDAQ

S&P 500

If you actually followed the market you'd know that 1. The entire week was a disaster. 2. Not much besides the dow went up today.
And the NASDAQ since the Propagandist took office?

January 22, 2001: 2,757.91
Today: 2,262.04

-18%
Uhh a stock market crash in sept of 2001 might have something to do with that...

Don't forget that was Clinton's fault and everything now is still Clinton's fault.
 

jlmadyson

Platinum Member
Aug 13, 2004
2,201
0
0
US economy's latest output: better jobs

Newest job numbers show that businesses are expanding opportunities in high-wage fields.

By Mark Trumbull | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

The US economy isn't just producing jobs these days, it's also producing good jobs. Alongside the ads for jobs handling a cash register or a spatula are these new opportunities:

? In St. Louis, AFB International is enlisting both technicians, paid $30,000 to $40,000, and PhD scientists, offered $80,000 to $100,000, in its quest for the perfect pet food.

? In Delaware, Honeywell plans to hire people at $40,000 to $100,000 to work in a data-storage center.

? In southern California, some of the latest openings involve working on the railroad, for $35,000 to $70,000 a year. Union Pacific plans to add 2,000 employees altogether.

These reports in the past month symbolize a welcome trend during an economic expansion that at first offered only tepid job gains, both in quantity and quality.

This good news about the breadth of job creation comes against a backdrop of labor-market anxiety that has persisted despite the economy's solid overall footing. Competition from imported goods, the threat of outsourcing services abroad, and a controversial influx of illegal laborers are just some of the forces that make many workers worried about their future.

Creating good jobs - the kinds that can keep American living standards rising - appears likely to remain a challenge. But the current employment picture at least indicates movement in a positive direction.

"We're creating lots of all kinds of jobs, across many industries, occupations, and pay scales," says Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com. But he adds: "If your skill sets are rusty, or at the low end of the skill range, you're going to have a tougher time."

The economy added 211,000 jobs in March, according to a Labor Department report Friday - a solid showing about on par with expectations. The unemployment rate fell a notch, to 4.7 percent.

The new jobs still include plenty at the low end: An analysis by Merrill Lynch finds that some 40 percent of the net gain in March came in two areas known for low pay: retail services and leisure/hospitality, which includes restaurants.

But this is just part of a broader tapestry. Management and professional occupations are employing 1.2 million more people this month than a year ago - or about 1 in 3 new jobs in America. This is the highest-paying of five broad categories tracked by the Labor Department. Not all of them are CEOs or engineers, but the median paycheck for full-time workers in this category is $937 a week, far above the US median of $651.

The construction industry continues to hammer out more than its share of new jobs. It accounts for about 6.4 percent of US jobs, but has provided 14.4 percent of the past year's job growth. The quality of construction jobs is mixed - often offering higher hourly pay than the US median but with lower benefits.

Even the manufacturing sector, which has long offered blue-collar workers a measure of middle-class prosperity, appears to be stabilizing after a period of heavy job losses. Despite downsizing in the automotive industry, 175,000 more people are employed in production occupations today than a year ago.

"As this recovery gets under way, professional services have begun adding jobs fairly broadly," says Jared Bernstein, an economist at the liberal Economic Policy Institute (EPI) in Washington.

EPI tracks the weighting of higher- versus lower-paying jobs that are being added to the economy. For much of the current expansion, which began at the end of 2001, that indicator has been negative.

In the past year, however, it has turned positive, meaning that the new jobs in the economy are the kind that tend to pull average wages up, not down.

Beyond professional services, one example may be construction. The housing market is cooling, but commercial building is heating up.

"More of the work will be in nonresidential construction," predicts Michael Carliner, an economist at the National Association of Home Builders. That could mean demand for higher skills, such as equipment operation, that boost pay.

The question, however, is how much of today's strengthening labor market represents cyclical trends, rather than long-term gains.

At this point, perhaps midway into an expansion phase, it's not unusual to see the job mix improve and pay to rise in new and existing jobs alike. "I would expect wages and compensation to increase faster," says Rae Hederman of the conservative Heritage Foundation in Washington.

How long that pattern lasts will depend in some measure on the Federal Reserve, which is now trying to decide whether to raise interest rates further. Setting rates too high, some experts warn, could slow the economy and dampen job growth.

The labor market's gains are beginning to take on the shape of a barbell, with growth weighted heavily at the two ends of the pay scale. During the current expansion, the bulk of new jobs have come in either the highest-paid of five broad occupational categories - management and professional - or the lowest-paid, services. Together the two sectors now account for more than half of all jobs. (The other three major categories are sales and office work, construction and natural resources, and production/transportation.)

The economy's overall share of jobs with strong pay and benefits has failed to grow during the past quarter century, even though workers today have higher skills and more technology to make them productive, says John Schmitt, an economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a liberal research institute in Washington. That's a break with the past, he says, when "wages typically tracked closely with productivity."
 

jlmadyson

Platinum Member
Aug 13, 2004
2,201
0
0
Weekly jobless claims fall sharply

APR. 20 11:01 A.M. ET The number of new people signing up for jobless benefits last week fell sharply, a fresh sign that employers are feeling better about the business climate.

The Labor Department reported Thursday that new applications filed for unemployment insurance dropped by 10,000 to 303,000, the best showing since the beginning of April. The level of new jobless-benefit filings suggest that the labor market is maintaining decent momentum.

Last week's decline was steeper than analysts were expecting. Before the report was released, they were forecasting claims to fall to 308,000.

Another economic report, however, offered a less positive signal about the economy.
The Conference Board reported that its closely watched gauge of future economic activity dipped 0.1 percent in March, suggesting economic activity could weaken later in the year.

The private research group said its Index of Leading Economic Indicators dropped to 138.4 in March from 138.5 in February. The index is closely watched because it predicts economic activity three months to six months into the future.

The index reading for March was slightly below analysts' projections; they had expected the index to show no change in March from February.

On the layoff front, the more stable, four-week moving average of new jobless claims, which smooths out week-to-week fluctuations, fell by 2,250 last week to 305,250. That marked the lowest level since late February.

Thursday's report also said the number of people continuing to collect unemployment benefits increased by 18,000 to 2.439 million for the week ending April 8, the most recent period for which that information is available.

Even with the increase, this figure still showed an improvement from last year, when the number of people continuing to draw jobless benefits stood at 2.639 million.

Other reports suggest that the job market is improving.

In March, the nation's unemployment rate dipped to 4.7 percent, matching its lowest point in 4 1/2 years. Hiring gains were widespread.

With the job market improving, the Federal Reserve will be keeping a close eye on wage growth and other inflation barometers.

To fend off inflation, many economists believe the Fed will bump up short-term interest rates again -- to 5 percent -- at its next meeting on May 10. That would mark the 16th quarter point move since the central bank began boosting rates in June 2004.

Although the Fed in the minutes of its March meeting released Tuesday said that its nearly two-year rate-raising campaign was probably coming to an end, it also made clear that interest rate decisions will rely more heavily on incoming data about inflation and economic activity.

The government reported Wednesday a sharp increase in consumer prices for March -- led by surging energy prices. Oil prices are now even higher, closing at a record high of more than $72 a barrel on Wednesday.

Many economists predict the Fed will stop tightening credit this year -- but they differ on the timing. Some think the last increase will come at the May meeting. Others believe the Fed will push up its key interest rate to 5.5 percent before stopping this summer.




 
Jun 27, 2005
19,216
1
61
Originally posted by: Genx87
This is all artificial, nothing to see here. ;)

Originally posted by: conjur
Easter holidays/spring break/etc. and some gov't offices were closed. Can't forget to take that into account.

BWAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHAhahahahahahahahahaaha.... Right on cue. :D
 

charrison

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
17,033
1
81
Originally posted by: Whoozyerdaddy
Originally posted by: Genx87
This is all artificial, nothing to see here. ;)

Originally posted by: conjur
Easter holidays/spring break/etc. and some gov't offices were closed. Can't forget to take that into account.

BWAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHAhahahahahahahahahaaha.... Right on cue. :D



Even if that is the case the numbers being reported indicate a strong job market.
 

jlmadyson

Platinum Member
Aug 13, 2004
2,201
0
0
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: Whoozyerdaddy
Originally posted by: Genx87
This is all artificial, nothing to see here. ;)

Originally posted by: conjur
Easter holidays/spring break/etc. and some gov't offices were closed. Can't forget to take that into account.

BWAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHAhahahahahahahahahaaha.... Right on cue. :D



Even if that is the case the numbers being reported indicate a strong job market.

Yea, I believe the April/May numbers may be even better.

 

jlmadyson

Platinum Member
Aug 13, 2004
2,201
0
0
US economy firing on all cylinders: data

Activity in both the vast US services sector and at factories accelerated more than expected, according to data that pointed to fresh economic vigour and the risk of more interest rate hikes.

Most economists are expecting economic growth to slow from a torrid first-quarter pace of 4.8 per cent, yet the latest figures showed no hints of slowing and appeared likely to keep the Federal Reserve leaning toward further rate rises. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said last week a pause in the rate-hike cycle was possible.

The Institute for Supply Management's services index rose to 63.0 in April from 60.5 in March, with new orders hitting a two-year high, confounding Wall Street estimates for a slowdown to 59.2.

In addition, the government reported new factory orders rose a stronger-than-expected 4.2 per cent in March, beating estimates for a 3.5 per cent gain, as demand for transportation equipment, computers and electronics proved robust.

Treasury debt prices fell and the dollar firmed against the euro after the data.

"It does suggest that the overall economy is improving and for the market it is part of the recent theme - all the numbers are coming in on the stronger side of expectations," said Scott Brown, chief economist at Raymond James & Associates in St Petersburg, Florida.

Financial markets have fully priced in another rate rise at the Fed's policy meeting next week, and on Wednesday raised the chances of a follow-up move in June.

"They want to keep their options open for late June but most likely they may end up leaning towards another rate hike as the data continues to come in strong," said Brown.

The services sector accounts for about 80 per cent of US economic activity, including businesses like restaurants, hotels, hair salons, banks and airlines.

"This suggests GDP growth momentum of 4.5 per cent to 5.0 per cent, rather than the slowdown to 3.25 per cent trend growth the Fed is banking on," said Ian Morris, chief US economist at HSBC.

"As a result we think this piece of news is significantly hawkish."

Businesses cited rising energy costs, with the prices-paid index hitting a six-month high, but overall activity was not dampened as new orders surged to 64.6 from 59.5.

"Most of the comments our members made this month were very positive, very bullish," said Ralph Kauffman, chair of the non-manufacturing ISM business survey committee.

"Retailers indicated that the prices they are paying are going up. I don't think that their sales are having a problem. Their profit margins are probably being squeezed somewhat."

Kaufmann also noted inventories rose in April and businesses were deliberating stockpiling goods in expectations of increased business ahead.

Separate government data showed March's gain in factory orders was caused in part to a 14.7 per cent jump in new orders for transportation equipment, while civilian aircraft and parts orders soared 71.3 per cent.

Orders for non defence capital goods climbed 12.9 per cent, the strongest increase since November. Stripped of aircraft, orders for non defence capital goods - a proxy for business spending - advanced a still-strong 3.9 per cent.

Orders for durable goods, expensive items meant to last three years or longer, advanced an even stronger 6.5 per cent in March, revised up from a 6.1 per cent gain reported last week.

The report also contained information on factory inventories that implied a small upward revision to first quarter GDP of around 0.2 percentage point, economists said, which combined with other revisions point to a pace above five per cent.

A new indicator released for the first time suggested a solid gain in April jobs, ahead of the official payrolls report due on Friday.

ADP Employer Services, a private firm, estimated the 178,000 private jobs were added in April, based on a survey sample of 14 million workers. It also estimated 22,000 government jobs were added, which would bring the month's total payrolls increase to 200,000, in line with current Wall Street consensus.

Financial markets are hoping the April jobs report will help clarify the outlook for official interest rates. Fed Chairman Bernanke last week said a pause in tightening was possible, but rates rises could resume even after a break in tightening.

April payrolls due out in the morning, I predict another good showing.
 

jlmadyson

Platinum Member
Aug 13, 2004
2,201
0
0
Economy creates 138,000 jobs in April; average hourly earnings jump 0.5%

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) Stocks to get a boost from jobs data


-- U.S. stock futures are pointing to a higher open Friday as slower-than-anticipated April jobs growth offset a larger-than-anticipated rise in hourly earnings, and bolstered hopes the Federal Reserve may no longer need to continue raising interest rates.

Dow futures were up 49 points at 11,515, Nasdaq 100 futures gained 11.25 points to 1,721 while S&P 500 futures rose 5.70 points to 1,322.50.
On Thursday, stocks ended higher as strong April sales results for retailers and a drop in crude-oil prices to a one-month low lifted the Dow Jones Industrial Average to its best level in more than six years.

The Dow industrials ($INDU : Dow Jones Industrial Average
News , chart, profile, more
Last: 11,495.13+56.27+0.49%

"The report as a whole is softer than expected," said Philip Shaw, analyst at Investec Securities. "It's not suggesting that the U.S. labor market is roaring away. Accordingly we've seen the dollar drop noticeably after the report and bonds have made some gains."

Shaw said stock futures extended gains as the report offered some hope the Fed may ease up on interest rates going forward. The dollar, which fell on the data, is another positive for stock investors. A weak dollar makes exports of U.S. goods cheaper and increases the value of repatriated earnings.

Nonfarm payrolls expanded by 138,000 in April, less than the 199,000 expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch. The unemployment rate remained at 4.7% as expected.

Average hourly earnings increased 0.5% to $16.61, more than the 0.3% forecast by economists. Earnings are up 3.8% in the past year, the biggest year-over-year gain since August 2001.

Employment report filters through other markets

The U.S. dollar turned lower against the Japanese yen and extended losses against the euro as the weaker-than-expected employment report raised the odds of the Federal Reserve putting a temporary halt to its cycle of interest rate increases. The euro was last up 0.3% at $1.2734. Against the yen, the greenback was off 0.03% at 113.47.
On the bond market, long-term Treasury prices turned positive, sending yields lower after the data. The benchmark 10-year note was up 2/32 at 95 1/32, with its yield

After losing more than $2 a barrel in the previous session, crude-oil futures rose early Friday with traders still too worried about developments in Iran and other trouble spots to keep the contract under $70. Crude for June delivery was last up 56 cents at $70.50 after ending at a one-month low under $70 on Thursday. See Futures Movers.

A little bit softer than I expected as well the street, biggest gains in average hourly earnings year over year since 2001, @3.8%, not too bad overall.
 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
126
Come on hourly wages increased? Jobs increased?

This is the fakest fake recovery I have seen.

 

Darkhawk28

Diamond Member
Dec 22, 2000
6,759
0
0
Originally posted by: jlmadyson
Economy creates 138,000 jobs in April; average hourly earnings jump 0.5%

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) Stocks to get a boost from jobs data


-- U.S. stock futures are pointing to a higher open Friday as slower-than-anticipated April jobs growth offset a larger-than-anticipated rise in hourly earnings, and bolstered hopes the Federal Reserve may no longer need to continue raising interest rates.

Dow futures were up 49 points at 11,515, Nasdaq 100 futures gained 11.25 points to 1,721 while S&P 500 futures rose 5.70 points to 1,322.50.
On Thursday, stocks ended higher as strong April sales results for retailers and a drop in crude-oil prices to a one-month low lifted the Dow Jones Industrial Average to its best level in more than six years.

The Dow industrials ($INDU : Dow Jones Industrial Average
News , chart, profile, more
Last: 11,495.13+56.27+0.49%

"The report as a whole is softer than expected," said Philip Shaw, analyst at Investec Securities. "It's not suggesting that the U.S. labor market is roaring away. Accordingly we've seen the dollar drop noticeably after the report and bonds have made some gains."

Shaw said stock futures extended gains as the report offered some hope the Fed may ease up on interest rates going forward. The dollar, which fell on the data, is another positive for stock investors. A weak dollar makes exports of U.S. goods cheaper and increases the value of repatriated earnings.

Nonfarm payrolls expanded by 138,000 in April, less than the 199,000 expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch. The unemployment rate remained at 4.7% as expected.

Average hourly earnings increased 0.5% to $16.61, more than the 0.3% forecast by economists. Earnings are up 3.8% in the past year, the biggest year-over-year gain since August 2001.

Employment report filters through other markets

The U.S. dollar turned lower against the Japanese yen and extended losses against the euro as the weaker-than-expected employment report raised the odds of the Federal Reserve putting a temporary halt to its cycle of interest rate increases. The euro was last up 0.3% at $1.2734. Against the yen, the greenback was off 0.03% at 113.47.
On the bond market, long-term Treasury prices turned positive, sending yields lower after the data. The benchmark 10-year note was up 2/32 at 95 1/32, with its yield

After losing more than $2 a barrel in the previous session, crude-oil futures rose early Friday with traders still too worried about developments in Iran and other trouble spots to keep the contract under $70. Crude for June delivery was last up 56 cents at $70.50 after ending at a one-month low under $70 on Thursday. See Futures Movers.

A little bit softer than I expected as well the street, biggest gains in average hourly earnings year over year since 2001, @3.8%, not too bad overall.

Break-even month for job creation.
 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
Originally posted by: jlmadyson
Economy creates 138,000 jobs in April; average hourly earnings jump 0.5%

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) Stocks to get a boost from jobs data


-- U.S. stock futures are pointing to a higher open Friday as slower-than-anticipated April jobs growth offset a larger-than-anticipated rise in hourly earnings, and bolstered hopes the Federal Reserve may no longer need to continue raising interest rates.

Dow futures were up 49 points at 11,515, Nasdaq 100 futures gained 11.25 points to 1,721 while S&P 500 futures rose 5.70 points to 1,322.50.
On Thursday, stocks ended higher as strong April sales results for retailers and a drop in crude-oil prices to a one-month low lifted the Dow Jones Industrial Average to its best level in more than six years.

The Dow industrials ($INDU : Dow Jones Industrial Average
News , chart, profile, more
Last: 11,495.13+56.27+0.49%

"The report as a whole is softer than expected,"

said Philip Shaw, analyst at Investec Securities. "It's not suggesting that the U.S. labor market is roaring away. Accordingly we've seen the dollar drop noticeably after the report and bonds have made some gains."

Shaw said stock futures extended gains as the report offered some hope the Fed may ease up on interest rates going forward. The dollar, which fell on the data, is another positive for stock investors. A weak dollar makes exports of U.S. goods cheaper and increases the value of repatriated earnings.

Nonfarm payrolls expanded by 138,000 in April, less than the 199,000 expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch. The unemployment rate remained at 4.7% as expected.

Average hourly earnings increased 0.5% to $16.61, more than the 0.3% forecast by economists. Earnings are up 3.8% in the past year, the biggest year-over-year gain since August 2001.

Employment report filters through other markets

The U.S. dollar turned lower against the Japanese yen and extended losses against the euro as the weaker-than-expected employment report raised the odds of the Federal Reserve putting a temporary halt to its cycle of interest rate increases. The euro was last up 0.3% at $1.2734. Against the yen, the greenback was off 0.03% at 113.47.
On the bond market, long-term Treasury prices turned positive, sending yields lower after the data. The benchmark 10-year note was up 2/32 at 95 1/32, with its yield

After losing more than $2 a barrel in the previous session, crude-oil futures rose early Friday with traders still too worried about developments in Iran and other trouble spots to keep the contract under $70. Crude for June delivery was last up 56 cents at $70.50 after ending at a one-month low under $70 on Thursday. See Futures Movers.

A little bit softer than I expected as well the street, biggest gains in average hourly earnings year over year since 2001, @3.8%, not too bad overall.

Interesting Partisan Hacking you do with the articles.

You try and bold whatever info to try and show Republicans in a good light despite the article full of holes.

Why didn't you bold this part?

"The report as a whole is softer than expected,"

Why didn't you post the real Title of the article?

Payrolls Grow Smallest Amount Since Oct.

Why? Because you are a Republican Hack Puppet.

Glad to see some American Sheeple waking up to you are your ilks tactics.

You don't have to worry though, come election time I know you guys have an awesome brainwashing re-training set up to get all the votes you need again.
 

jlmadyson

Platinum Member
Aug 13, 2004
2,201
0
0
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: jlmadyson
Economy creates 138,000 jobs in April; average hourly earnings jump 0.5%

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) Stocks to get a boost from jobs data


-- U.S. stock futures are pointing to a higher open Friday as slower-than-anticipated April jobs growth offset a larger-than-anticipated rise in hourly earnings, and bolstered hopes the Federal Reserve may no longer need to continue raising interest rates.

Dow futures were up 49 points at 11,515, Nasdaq 100 futures gained 11.25 points to 1,721 while S&P 500 futures rose 5.70 points to 1,322.50.
On Thursday, stocks ended higher as strong April sales results for retailers and a drop in crude-oil prices to a one-month low lifted the Dow Jones Industrial Average to its best level in more than six years.

The Dow industrials ($INDU : Dow Jones Industrial Average
News , chart, profile, more
Last: 11,495.13+56.27+0.49%

"The report as a whole is softer than expected,"

said Philip Shaw, analyst at Investec Securities. "It's not suggesting that the U.S. labor market is roaring away. Accordingly we've seen the dollar drop noticeably after the report and bonds have made some gains."

Shaw said stock futures extended gains as the report offered some hope the Fed may ease up on interest rates going forward. The dollar, which fell on the data, is another positive for stock investors. A weak dollar makes exports of U.S. goods cheaper and increases the value of repatriated earnings.

Nonfarm payrolls expanded by 138,000 in April, less than the 199,000 expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch. The unemployment rate remained at 4.7% as expected.

Average hourly earnings increased 0.5% to $16.61, more than the 0.3% forecast by economists. Earnings are up 3.8% in the past year, the biggest year-over-year gain since August 2001.

Employment report filters through other markets

The U.S. dollar turned lower against the Japanese yen and extended losses against the euro as the weaker-than-expected employment report raised the odds of the Federal Reserve putting a temporary halt to its cycle of interest rate increases. The euro was last up 0.3% at $1.2734. Against the yen, the greenback was off 0.03% at 113.47.
On the bond market, long-term Treasury prices turned positive, sending yields lower after the data. The benchmark 10-year note was up 2/32 at 95 1/32, with its yield

After losing more than $2 a barrel in the previous session, crude-oil futures rose early Friday with traders still too worried about developments in Iran and other trouble spots to keep the contract under $70. Crude for June delivery was last up 56 cents at $70.50 after ending at a one-month low under $70 on Thursday. See Futures Movers.

A little bit softer than I expected as well the street, biggest gains in average hourly earnings year over year since 2001, @3.8%, not too bad overall.

Interesting Partisan Hacking you do with the articles.

You try and bold whatever info to try and show Republicans in a good light despite the article full of holes.

Why didn't you bold this part?

"The report as a whole is softer than expected,"

Why didn't you post the real Title of the article?

Payrolls Grow Smallest Amount Since Oct.

Why? Because you are a Republican Hack Puppet.

Glad to see some American Sheeple waking up to you are your ilks tactics.

You don't have to worry though, come election time I know you guys have an awesome brainwashing re-training set up to get all the votes you need again.

And you're a Democrat hack? yea

Jobs are still being created plus gains in earnings, oh how so terrible. But hey, keep it up Dave with your so called Presidential hopes. Keep on dreaming in that dream world you live in. Oh it?s the Republicans fault, that sounds about right, right, please.

And for the record the title of the article is;

Dow, S&P at multi-year highs after jobs data

Woo damning title their, I chose the subtitle to highlight the data which they have actually changed the subtitle now, oh so sorry for you.
 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
Originally posted by: jlmadyson
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: jlmadyson
Economy creates 138,000 jobs in April; average hourly earnings jump 0.5%

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) Stocks to get a boost from jobs data


-- U.S. stock futures are pointing to a higher open Friday as slower-than-anticipated April jobs growth offset a larger-than-anticipated rise in hourly earnings, and bolstered hopes the Federal Reserve may no longer need to continue raising interest rates.

Dow futures were up 49 points at 11,515, Nasdaq 100 futures gained 11.25 points to 1,721 while S&P 500 futures rose 5.70 points to 1,322.50.
On Thursday, stocks ended higher as strong April sales results for retailers and a drop in crude-oil prices to a one-month low lifted the Dow Jones Industrial Average to its best level in more than six years.

The Dow industrials ($INDU : Dow Jones Industrial Average
News , chart, profile, more
Last: 11,495.13+56.27+0.49%

"The report as a whole is softer than expected,"

said Philip Shaw, analyst at Investec Securities. "It's not suggesting that the U.S. labor market is roaring away. Accordingly we've seen the dollar drop noticeably after the report and bonds have made some gains."

Shaw said stock futures extended gains as the report offered some hope the Fed may ease up on interest rates going forward. The dollar, which fell on the data, is another positive for stock investors. A weak dollar makes exports of U.S. goods cheaper and increases the value of repatriated earnings.

Nonfarm payrolls expanded by 138,000 in April, less than the 199,000 expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch. The unemployment rate remained at 4.7% as expected.

Average hourly earnings increased 0.5% to $16.61, more than the 0.3% forecast by economists. Earnings are up 3.8% in the past year, the biggest year-over-year gain since August 2001.

Employment report filters through other markets

The U.S. dollar turned lower against the Japanese yen and extended losses against the euro as the weaker-than-expected employment report raised the odds of the Federal Reserve putting a temporary halt to its cycle of interest rate increases. The euro was last up 0.3% at $1.2734. Against the yen, the greenback was off 0.03% at 113.47.
On the bond market, long-term Treasury prices turned positive, sending yields lower after the data. The benchmark 10-year note was up 2/32 at 95 1/32, with its yield

After losing more than $2 a barrel in the previous session, crude-oil futures rose early Friday with traders still too worried about developments in Iran and other trouble spots to keep the contract under $70. Crude for June delivery was last up 56 cents at $70.50 after ending at a one-month low under $70 on Thursday. See Futures Movers.

A little bit softer than I expected as well the street, biggest gains in average hourly earnings year over year since 2001, @3.8%, not too bad overall.

Interesting Partisan Hacking you do with the articles.

You try and bold whatever info to try and show Republicans in a good light despite the article full of holes.

Why didn't you bold this part?

"The report as a whole is softer than expected,"

Why didn't you post the real Title of the article?

Payrolls Grow Smallest Amount Since Oct.

Why? Because you are a Republican Hack Puppet.

Glad to see some American Sheeple waking up to you are your ilks tactics.

You don't have to worry though, come election time I know you guys have an awesome brainwashing re-training set up to get all the votes you need again.

And you're a Democrat hack? yea

Jobs are still being created plus gains in earnings, oh how so terrible. But hey, keep it up Dave with your so called Presidential hopes. Keep on dreaming in that dream world you live in. Oh it?s the Republicans fault, that sounds about right, right, please.

And for the record the title of the article is;

Dow, S&P at multi-year highs after jobs data

Woo damning title their, I chose the subtitle to highlight the data which they have actually changed the subtitle now, oh so sorry for you.

Yes, Murdocks so called "News" organizations are guilty of the same thing you are doing.

But the American Sheeple have spoekn and said they trust Murdock's Fox News more than anything else, of course because they are brainwashed.

I'm impressed, really. I didn't have any idea I would be witnessing a better and more successful use of it like 1930's Germany in my lifetime.

I'm not that surprised because History Repeats itself because Humans Repeat Mistakes.

Here is the link and full article not influenced by Murdock

Payrolls Grow Smallest Amount Since Oct.

Sadly soon Murdock and the Republicans will sucessfully squash any disenting articles.

Then you will be 110% totally happy.
 

umbrella39

Lifer
Jun 11, 2004
13,816
1,126
126
:roll: Ah the weekly the economy is just great thread. LMAO. Keep interning for the bush admin, one wonders why you have to work so hard to convince America that everything is just fine. And America still isn't buying it. Go figure.
 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
126
You have to wonder why people complain about a growing economy with jobs growth, wage growth, and the stock market gaining.

 

dullard

Elite Member
May 21, 2001
25,963
4,567
126
Originally posted by: Genx87
You have to wonder why people complain about a growing economy with jobs growth, wage growth, and the stock market gaining.
We complain because the economy growth is not what it could be.
[*]The job growth of 138,000 is not enough to match ~150,000 new workers each month. So per capita, the jobs were not growing, but shrinking.
[*]Wage growth is there but it isn't what it could be.
[*]The stock market has moved 0 points in 6 years. Including inflation, the market is way down over 6 years.
[*]During this growing economy, the government should be getting a surplus to save up for deficit spending in the next recession. But no, we are at a deficit and we are not preparing for the bad times. Ever hear of the fable with the grasshopper who didn't prepare for the future?

The economy is good, it just isn't great. Why can't we strive for greatness? Why should we settle just for good? Hey, if doing the minimum is fine for you, then I'm happy for you. Some of us like doing more than the minimum. Hmm, Office Space comes to mind. I like more than 15 pieces of flair.