Latest JOLTS Report Shows a Steady Labor Market
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

Latest JOLTS Report Shows a Steady Labor Market

Today’s JOLTS Report for April is mixed. While the decline in job openings from a revised 8.4M to 8.1M, the lowest level in three years, suggests softening demand for workers, the increase in hires and quits implies quite the opposite—resilient demand and plentiful opportunity.

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Inflation is Hotter Than Expected Again
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

Inflation is Hotter Than Expected Again

The consumer price index (CPI) and core CPI (which excludes food and energy) came in slightly hotter than expected this morning. The CPI rose 0.4% over the month, with year-over-year inflation rising to 3.2% from 3.1%. Core CPI also rose 0.4% over the month, falling to 3.8% from 3.9%.

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Inflation Was Firmer Than Expected Due to the Undersupply of Housing
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

Inflation Was Firmer Than Expected Due to the Undersupply of Housing

The consumer price index came in slightly hotter than expected this morning, but showed continued gradual progress in the fight against inflation. The CPI rose 0.3% over the month, with year-over-year inflation falling to 3.1% from 3.4%. Core CPI rose 0.4% over the month, holding steady at 3.9%.

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Is It Too Early To Declare “Mission Accomplished” on Inflation?
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

Is It Too Early To Declare “Mission Accomplished” on Inflation?

Personal income and consumer spending both rose at a rate of 0.7% in December, well above the expected 0.5% pace. Incomes were boosted by robust wage growth and rising asset returns, which have expanded Americans’ real disposable personal income—that is, income after taxes and inflation—4.2% over the past year.

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Reaction: The Job Market Slowed But Dodged a Recession in 2023
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

Reaction: The Job Market Slowed But Dodged a Recession in 2023

Friday’s Jobs Report was mixed, with solid job gains (+216K) and wage growth (4.1% over the year) in the establishment survey, but weak employment growth (just +72K) and participation-related figures in the household survey. Factoring in downward revisions to the prior months’ figures, the 3-month average job gain was 165K, right in line with the 2019 average, suggesting that the labor market has come back to pre-pandemic normal.

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A Blowout Jobs Report Shows Strong Job Gains Across the Board
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

A Blowout Jobs Report Shows Strong Job Gains Across the Board

It is hard to find any bad news in today’s jobs report. With an acceleration in job growth to 336K payrolls in September and upward revisions for the prior months, the jobs data is finally consistent with real-time estimates of third-quarter GDP growth. Together, they suggest a summertime boom.

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State Employment Trends Continue to Diverge
Julia Pollak Julia Pollak

State Employment Trends Continue to Diverge

States where employment has grown rapidly over the past year continue to outperform, and those where employment has been sluggish continue to lag behind. Three of the states with the largest employment gains since the pandemic continued to experience the fastest job growth rates.

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