Given that
this is the July 4th holiday week, and Independence Day occurred
smack in the middle of the week, trading in the stock market has been light. Many people appear to be on vacation, or at
least taking a few extra days off. As
much as there have been some economic reports, reaction in the markets has been
subdued. Additionally, it seems that
most investors have been keeping there are eyes on Friday’s National
Unemployment Report before doing any real investing.
8:30AM Friday
the Labor Department announced that the unemployment rate remained unchanged at
8.2%. This report was in line with most
predictions. The concerning part of the
report is that only 84,000 private sector jobs were created. This number is lower than expected and
further indicates that employers are not expanding their workforces as much as
many would hope.
Nonfarm
payroll employment in May rose only 69,000, following increases of 77,000 in
April and 143,000 in March. The addition
of 84,000 jobs in June indicates that we are a long ways away from job recovery
and that the trend of hiring mains virtually flat.
As a point of
interest, if you have been reading this newsletter for a few months, you know
that I find the need to compare the actual National Unemployment Report with
ADP’s Payroll Report. ADP has such a
poor track record of predicting unemployment that one will question if they are
doing this with their eyes closed.
For the month
of June, ADP once again proved that they are clueless in predicting employment
numbers. ADP estimated an increase of
136,000 jobs, whereas the actual number was only 84,000. For what has pretty much become a normal
monthly occurrence, ADP, a payroll company, is way off the mark. (I am trying to figure out that if I was
wrong 10 out of 12 times I made a prediction in a business that I am supposed
to be an expert in, what my clients would think of me)
At the
opening bell investors indicated their displeasure with the jobs report. Within 2 minutes of trading on Friday the DOW
plummeted more than 120 points as investors pulled money from stocks and placed
them into the safe haven of government bonds.
Outside of
Friday’s labor report, we saw a drop of First Time Jobless Claims of 14,000 in
the June 30 week to 374,000. The figure
is well under expectations for 386,000, however 374,000 is still not a number
that should be celebrated as it is still hovering at a level that does not
support economic recovery.
On the
housing front, not much to report this week, however what little news there
was, it was positive. Construction
appears to be picking up steam. Construction spending jumped 0.9 percent in
May, following a 0.6 percent gain in April.
The consensus was for a 0.2 percent increase for May.
The increase in May was led by private residential spending which rose 3.0 percent after a 1.7 percent rise in April. Although the new multifamily area showed the greatest strength, new single-family spending was notably positive. Compared to a year ago, overall construction is up 7.0 percent in May.
The increase in May was led by private residential spending which rose 3.0 percent after a 1.7 percent rise in April. Although the new multifamily area showed the greatest strength, new single-family spending was notably positive. Compared to a year ago, overall construction is up 7.0 percent in May.
JJ Mack
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