US DATA: Unemployment Rate Jump Driven By Prime Joblessness, But Caveats Abound
Dec-16 14:29
The rise in the unemployment rate to 4.56% unrounded in November from 4.44% in September represented a higher-than-expected reading and a fresh high for joblessness since September 2021. Analyst median consensus was 4.5%, with many more leaning toward 4.4% unrounded than 4.6% - and while the interpolated 0.06pp average monthly increase implies a slower pace of rises vs the preceding 3 months, this puts the U/E rate on track for an overshoot of the FOMC's 4.5% median expectation for Q4.
Prime-age unemployment rate picked up to 3.91% (highest since Oct 2021) from 3.65% over the course of the two months, with the 0.26pp rise far outpacing the 0.12pp overall increase. And other signs of loosening, the U-6 underemployment rate jumped to 8.7% from 8.0%, easily the highest since August 2021, while the teenage unemployment soared 3.1pp to 16.3%, a post-August 2020 high. And employment grew by just 96k over 2 months, after rising an average 270k in each of September and August.
However, there are many caveats to the above that imply some oddities in November's collection, above and beyond the late and longer survey period.
The actual number of unemployed rose only 228k over the two months, an average of 114k which would be on the low side of the preceding 4 months' change.
And this was driven too by re-entrants to the workforce: 293k over 2 months, a figure not seen since 2021, and arguably a sign of increased confidence in the labor market. In contrast, job leavers totaled only 34k (171k of which were due to temporary layoff, with -136k not on temporary layoff - both outsized numbers for these series and unclear whether affected by the federal shutdown). Permanent job losers fell, both in raw numbers and as a % rate of the workforce (1.13% from 1.18%).
With participation ticking marginally higher to 62.47% from 62.45%, amid a 323k 2-month rise in the labor force, the overall unemployment rate was nudged higher. Prime-age participation increased 0.1pp to 83.8%, highest since September 2024. For 16-24 it jumped 0.4pp to 55.9%, highest since April (partly explaining the teenage unemployment jump), with 55+ dipping 0.2pp to 37.9% as part of a secular trend that brought it to the lowest level since 2006.
Prime employment-population dipped to the lowest since July.
Canadian analysts' expectations for October inflation:
CIBC: "Inflation should have eased slightly in October, mainly due to a drop in gasoline prices following an increase in the prior month that was atypical of usual seasonal patterns....Measures of core inflation may not decelerate as much, with rent inflation still stubbornly higher relative to market asking prices.... Inflationary pressures should have eased again relative to the prior month but, with various year-over-year core measures still averaging closer to 3% than 2%, the inflation data are likely to reaffirm that the Bank of Canada is on hold for the foreseeable future."
Desjardins: "The removal of retaliatory tariffs last month continues to filter through to consumer prices, which should help temper headline inflation in the coming months. With goods inflation excluding food and energy already trending lower, the elimination of countertariffs is expected to further support this normalization. Services inflation, which remained sticky due to strong readings in late 2024, is likely to continue its downward trajectory, with additional progress anticipated through Q4. A similar trend is evident in the Bank of Canada’s core measures, which likely moderated slightly in October but remain near 3%."
National: "Despite a drop in energy prices, headline prices may still have increased 0.2% in the month (not seasonally adjusted). If we’re right, the annual inflation rate could decline by three-tenths of a percentage point to 2.1% as a result of a highly negative base effect. Looking at the Bank of Canada's core measures, we expect the CPI-med to move from 3.2% to 3.1% on an annual basis, while the CPI-trim should ease from 3.1% to 3.0%.
RBC: "moderation is expected to be primarily driven by lower gasoline prices, which fell 5% from September. We expect food price growth to hold close to September’s 3.8% annual rate in October. The October data will include the annual update on property tax prices in the CPI data. Significant property tax increases again took effect in some major population centers, but nationally we expect a smaller increase (4%) than the 6% increase in October a year ago. Headline CPI growth continues to be distorted on the downside by the removal of the carbon tax from energy products in most provinces in April. Broader measures of ‘core’ inflation are expected to remain above the Bank of Canada’s 2% target rate in October."
TD: "A larger drag from energy and further disinflation in shelter should drive the headline print, while core measures edge lower to 2.95% y/y in a sign of thawing underlying price pressures. However, we don't expect material implications for the near-term rate outlook given hawkish BoC guidance last month."
CANADA DATA: October CPI Preview: Moderation Won't Sway BOC From Holding (1/2)
Nov-14 21:24
Canadian CPI is expected to have pulled back in October from September's 7-month high 2.4% Y/Y. Consensus (Bloomberg median) sees October CPI at 2.2% Y/Y (2.4% prior), with M/M at 0.2% (0.1% prior), while the average Median/Trim measure is seen at 3.05% (3.15% prior).
MNI's analyst median skews a little softer than that. In the next note we include some sell-side expectations for Monday's release - several haven't yet published their forecasts but we will provide our usual roundup on Monday ahead of the print.
A variety of factors are seen behind the moderation, including Ottawa's removal of retaliatory tariffs on the US in September, as well as softer gasoline prices. Overall, core goods inflation is moderating with core services merely a little stickier, and it was largely food/energy inflation and downstream effects thereof that spurred the latest tickup in overall CPI.
The standout takeaway from the September CPI report was in the stubborn trim/median average failing to decelerate in the month as expected. Though that particular measure has been increasingly discounted by Bank of Canada policymakers, core metrics were also largely sequentially steady/higher. None appeared to be game-changers however in terms of the overall consensus narrative of gradual disinflation from the summer's highs but nonetheless ensured the report carried a slightly hawkish tone overall with continued evidence that prices may be a little sticker than hoped.
October's data are unlikely to change the Bank of Canada's assessment at the October meeting that "Looking at the full range of inflation indicators, Governing Council concluded that underlying inflation was still around 2½%."
In any case they "acknowledged that year-over-year inflation would be choppy in the coming months" so would be likely to maintain the bias to hold rates for the foreseeable future even in the event of a downside surprise.
US STOCKS CLOSE: Equities Recover From Intraday Pullback
Nov-14 21:07
Equities recovered from a sharp intraday sell-off to close roughly flat Friday, with the Nasdaq and S&P 500 almost unchanged but the the Dow Jones retracing 0.7% after Thursday's outperformance.
Reeling from concerns over AI-related valuations and waning prospects for a December Fed cut, the S&P fell as much as 1.3% (6,646.87) which would have marked the lowest close in a month, but bounced to trade roughly flat on the session.
Energy (+1.4%) and tech (0.7%) outperformed on the S&P 500, with losses led by financials (-1.0%) and materials (-1.2%).
Megacaps NVidia (+1.6%) and Microsoft (+1.3%) were the biggest upside contributors, offsetting downside for Google (-0.7%), Netflix (-3.4%) and Amazon (-1.1%) in the tech/communications space, while JPM (-1.8%), Visa (-1.7%) and Mastercard (-1.8%) pulled down financials.
Latest futures levels: Dow Jones mini down 325 pts or -0.68% at 47253, S&P 500 mini down 6.25 pts or -0.09% at 6762.5, NASDAQ mini down 13.75 pts or -0.05% at 25125.25.