Weak US Oct payrolls growth skewed by storms, strikes

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(Reuters) -U.S. job growth slowed sharply in October amid disruptions from hurricanes and strikes by aerospace factory workers, but the unemployment rate held steady at 4.1%, offering assurance that the labor market remained on solid footing ahead of Tuesday's election.

Nonfarm payrolls increased by 12,000 jobs last month after surging by a downwardly revised 223,000 in September, the Labor Department said on Friday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast payrolls rising 113,000.

MARKET REACTION:STOCKS: S&P 500 E-minis added to gains and were up 0.43%

BONDS: The yield on benchmark U.S. 10-year notesfell to 4.2605%, the two-year note yield fell to4.1124%FOREX: The dollar index turned 0.019% lower COMMENTS:

MATT BUSH, US ECONOMIST, GUGGENHEIM INVESTMENTS, NEW YORK

"(The Fed) were pretty locked in, no matter what this report was going to say, because of just the uncertainty around hurricane impacts. The concern was, they may try to reduce expectations for cuts beyond the November meeting, maybe walk back expectations for December or walk back the number of cuts they were kind of signaling for 2025. This report was weak enough where they'll just keep all options open and firmly leave the door open to another cut in December and the meetings beyond that."

BEN VASKE, SENIOR INVESTMENT STRATEGIST, ORION PORTFOLIO SOLUTIONS, OMAHA, NEBRASKA

"October job growth was sharply lower relative to September and consensus expectations. However, lower growth was expected to a degree given election uncertainty, recent labor strikes, and hurricanes impacting the southeast US – the labor market has already begun recovery from the two latter effects. Despite lower growth, the unemployment rate remained steady, and early reactions seem to not be impacting expectations that the Fed will proceed with another 25-basis point rate cut in November."

CHARLIE RIPLEY, SENIOR INVESTMENT STRATEGIST, ALLIANZ INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT, MINNEAPOLIS

"From an investment standpoint, this doesn't really change much in terms of what's expected from a Fed standpoint or thoughts around the slowing economy. We have to look past this month's data and see what comes out in the following months when there's much less noise."

"There's definitely some mixed signals - the weaker payroll number versus an unemployment rate that was largely the same, and then a small uptick on the monthly wage side. When you round it all together it's a pretty mixed report."

PETER CARDILLO, CHIEF MARKET ECONOMIST, SPARTAN CAPITAL SECURITIES, NEW YORK