Not too hot. Not too cold. The economic data that came out on Friday just might have been perfect. Perfect if you’re worried about an overheating economy and inflation. Perfect, if you’re worried about a weakening economy, a spike in unemployment, and a potential recession.
All of us here at the Ministry of Truth thought stocks were in for a pretty good day as soon as the labor market numbers hit the tape at 8:30 am ET, and we were right, at least at first.
But Friday was also triple witching. That’s the day that occurs once each quarter when index futures, index options, and stock options all expire. It often makes for a high-volume, roller coaster of a day as traders have to square away their books Or pay the piper.
And that is precisely what we got on Friday.
Stocks rallied at the open on the economic news but sold off throughout the day to finish with substantial losses on solid volume. But again, we attribute most of that to triple witching.
Bonds were mixed.
The Commerce Department released the balance of the labor market complex on Friday, and the numbers were mixed. But mixed is a good thing
First, the bad news: the unemployment rate spiked to 3.9% in February. This exceeded both expectations of 3.7% and January’s number, which was also 3.7%. That’s the headline number, and it wasn’t great, but that wasn’t all the bad news.
Year-over-year average hourly earnings also disappointed. Economists were expecting earnings to have grown at a 4.4% annual rate. And they were wrong! They came in at 4.3%.
Wages came in below expectations for February as well. The month-over-month expectation was for an increase of two-tenths of a percent. A one-tenth of one percent increase is all we got.
Still, average hourly earnings are increasing just at a slightly slower pace than expected. Had they decreased, well, that would have been a different kettle of fish.
And there was some good news. The economy created 275,000 new jobs in February, versus expectations of 198,000. And the January number of 229,000 new jobs. So both directionally and versus expectations, payrolls grew in February, and that is very good news indeed.
If it feels like to you that just as we get done digesting one set of inflation numbers, we have another one on the horizon, you are right.
Tomorrow we get the CPI complex. The street expects the Consumer Price Index to have increased by 0.3% for February and at a 3.7% annual rate. Core CPI is expected to have increased 0.3% for the month and at 3.7% for the year.
While inflation is way down from where it was eighteen months ago, a 4% annual rate is well above the Fed’s target of 2% and just way too high. Further, the numbers have increased steadily for the last four months. There is still work to do on the inflation front.