The unemployment numbers are out and came in better than expected. This confirms that the economy is growing and that consumers are gaining confidence heading into the holiday selling season.
Labor force participation increased, jobs grew by 171,000 and the unemplyment rate ticked up to 7.9%. All in all a modest surprise to the upside and that's great to see.
U.S. adds 171,00 jobs, unemployment 7.9% contains the breaking news:
"The U.S. economy gained a better-than-expected 171,000 jobs in October and more
people were hired in the prior two months than previously believed, but the
unemployment rate ticked up to 7.9% from 7.8%, the government said Friday.
Economists surveyed by MarketWatch expected a 120,000 increase in jobs, with an
unemployment rate of 7.9%.
Employment gains for September and August were
revised up by a combined 84,000. The number of new jobs created in September was
revised to 148,000 from a prior estimate of 114,000, while August's figure was
revised to 192,000 from 142,000. The latest jobs report, coming just four days
before the presidential election, is unlikely to change the trajectory of the
race. Hiring has picked up over the past four months, but unemployment remains
high.
Yet the improved hiring trend is a welcome sign to Wall Street that the
U.S. economy is still continuing to expand. The biggest increase in hiring last
month occurred in professional services, health care, retail and leisure and
hospitality. Average hourly wages, meanwhile, fell 1 cent to $23.58. The average
workweek was unchanged for the fourth month in a row at 34.4 hours."
Summing Up
All in all, better than expected.
That's good news for the economy and consumers, too.
Even modest good news for job seekers, although it's best not to get carried away. The key word is modest.
Thanks. Bob.
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