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5. Futures Economic Reports for Tuesday August 11, 2015
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For 2015 I would like to wish all of you discipline and patience in your trading!
Hello Traders,
TradeTheNews.com Weekly Market Update: See You in September
Fri, 07 Aug 2015 16:27 PM EST
US equity indices saw modest losses this week and the 10-year yield pulled back to levels last seen in late May as investors continued to brood over the timing of Fed rate liftoff. The consensus heading into Friday’s July jobs report was that any non-farm payrolls figure above +200K would support expectations for the Fed to tighten policy in September, and the +215K figure on Friday did the job. In China, the government extended its campaign of heavy-handed interventions to keep the Shanghai Composite steady. Economic data continued to suggest the economy is slowing: the official China manufacturing PMI index stalled out in July, hitting 50.0 after four months of very slight expansion. Europe is finally seeing solid improvements in economic data, with most of the continent’s July manufacturing PMI data beating expectations and firmly in expansion territory (although France did slip back into contraction in the month). For the week, the DJIA lost -1.8%, the S&P dropped -1.2%, and the Nasdaq gave up -1.7%.
The non-farm payrolls total came in slightly below expectations, but overall the July jobs report still indicates some improvement in the US labor market. Employers added 215,000 jobs in July, 10 thousand less than expected, but this marked the 58th consecutive month of job gains, the longest stretch on record. Both the June and May figures were revised slightly higher. Unemployment didn’t budge from its post-crisis low of 5.3%, while average hourly earnings rose 0.2% sequentially and 2.1% on an annualized basis, on par with the pace of much of the expansion. The labor-force participation rate remained at a multi-decade low, suggesting there remains quite a bit of slack in the labor market. The consensus heading into the data was that any figure above +200K would keep the Fed on track for tightening policy in September, and based on Fed-funds futures, the odds of a September hike rose to 56% from 46% before the jobs report.
In other US economic data, personal spending and core PCE growth held steady at low levels in July, although the y/y figure was a hair higher. The July ISM manufacturing index fell to 52.7 from 53.5 the month before, however the new orders component rose slightly to 56.5 from 56.0 in June, marking the highest reading since December. The July ISM non-manufacturing index saw very strong growth, rising to 60.3 from 56 m/m, with a new orders component up at 63.8. Construction spending barely rose in June as private outlays posted their biggest drop in a year, but the May figures were revised up to +1.8% from +0.8% prior.
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