Employment Situation Report for July, 2006
The Employment Situation report for July, 2006 was released by The Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics this morning:
Average Hourly Earnings (month-to-month change)
Consensus: +0.3%
Actual: +0.4%
Non-farm Payrolls (month-to-month change)
Consensus: +150K
Actual: +113K
Average Workweek
Consensus: 33.9 hrs
Actual: 33.9 hrs
Unemployment Rate
Consensus: 4.6%
Actual: 4.8%
Economist, academics, bankers and investors pay very close attention to the monthly Employment Situation report as it offers penetrating insight as to the current and near-future state of the overall U.S. economy. If a) Americans are earning more money, b) unemployment is low and c) the economy is creating new jobs, this typically translates to more money being pumped into the economy (and vice versa.)
If the Employment Situation report indicates wage inflation, this can lead to an increased likelihood that the Fed will raise interest rates @ the next FOMC meeting; consequently, if the Fed raises interest rates, then stock and bond prices may take a hit, because the increased cost of borrowing typically translates to less profits for the banking sector (higher mortgage rates = a slower mortgage / mortgage refinance market) and less consumer spending in general (credit card rates go up, etc.)
The "consensus" is what economists and Wall Street forecasters were expecting, while the "actual" is the actual or real figure.
Click here to view the full Department of Labor report.
Average Hourly Earnings (month-to-month change)
Consensus: +0.3%
Actual: +0.4%
Non-farm Payrolls (month-to-month change)
Consensus: +150K
Actual: +113K
Average Workweek
Consensus: 33.9 hrs
Actual: 33.9 hrs
Unemployment Rate
Consensus: 4.6%
Actual: 4.8%
Economist, academics, bankers and investors pay very close attention to the monthly Employment Situation report as it offers penetrating insight as to the current and near-future state of the overall U.S. economy. If a) Americans are earning more money, b) unemployment is low and c) the economy is creating new jobs, this typically translates to more money being pumped into the economy (and vice versa.)
If the Employment Situation report indicates wage inflation, this can lead to an increased likelihood that the Fed will raise interest rates @ the next FOMC meeting; consequently, if the Fed raises interest rates, then stock and bond prices may take a hit, because the increased cost of borrowing typically translates to less profits for the banking sector (higher mortgage rates = a slower mortgage / mortgage refinance market) and less consumer spending in general (credit card rates go up, etc.)
The "consensus" is what economists and Wall Street forecasters were expecting, while the "actual" is the actual or real figure.
Click here to view the full Department of Labor report.
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