US Payrolls Increase by Just 12,000, Hit by Storms and Strikes

US Payrolls Increase by Just 12,000, Hit by Storms and Strikes · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- US hiring advanced at the slowest pace since 2020 while the unemployment rate remained low in October, a month distorted by severe hurricanes and a major strike at Boeing Co.

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Nonfarm payrolls increased 12,000 last month, and hiring over the previous two months was weaker than previously thought, suggesting the underlying labor market continues to cool. The unemployment rate held at 4.1% and hourly earnings ticked up, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics figures released Friday.

BLS said two hurricanes that hit the Southeast US likely affected hiring in some industries, but it wasn’t possible to quantify the net effect on the change in employment, hours or earnings last month. There was no discernible effect on the unemployment rate, however. The report also showed manufacturing jobs plunged, largely reflecting strike activity in October.

Taken together, Friday’s data indicate the labor market is still softening beyond the temporary factors and caveats. This is the last major data point on the economy before the US presidential election and is expected to keep the Federal Reserve on track to cut interest rates next week.

“While it’s hard to fully parse out how much of this was noise versus signal, I think you do see enough softening here to indicate that the jobs market is still struggling to gain its footing,” said Sarah House, senior economist at Wells Fargo & Co.

Fed officials are more focused on preserving the labor market with inflation largely on a downward trend. Policymakers are widely expected to cut interest rates by a quarter percentage point at their Nov. 6-7 meeting, a more measured adjustment after an outsize reduction in September.

The rate cut followed a weak August job report. Friday’s report showed that payrolls figure was even weaker than initially reported, rising just 78,000 in the month. But September’s employment report — which came out shortly after the Fed met — was a blowout.

Subsequent data also pointed to solid economic activity, encouraging several officials to advocate for a more gradual approach to rate cuts going forward. Figures out earlier this week showed the economy grew at a strong pace in the third quarter while inflation picked up in September.

That data led some to worry the economy was reaccelerating. Andrew Hollenhorst, Citigroup Inc. chief US economist, said “this report makes it really clear that that’s not what’s going on.”