The economy added 132k (consensus 125k) new jobs in June. May's figure was revised substantially higher to +190k from +157k originally reported. April payrolls were also revised higher to +122k from 80k. Net over the prior two months 75k more new jobs were created than originally thought. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.5% in June as the labor force participation rate rose slightly to 66.1%. The aggregate hours index rose +.5% MoM.
Average hourly earnings rose +.3% MoM, as expected. Over the past year, average hourly earnings have risen 3.9% YoY. This compares with a 4% gain in May, which was a revision higher from +3.8% YoY gain originally reported for May. Average weekly hours were as expected at 33.9 hours, but the figure for May was revised lower to 33.8 hours from the 33.9 hours originally reported.
Manufacturing payrolls fell more than expected in June (-18k, consensus -11k) but were offset by a revision in the May figures to only a 7k loss versus -19k. Manufacturing hours jumped by .2 hours to 41.3 hours per week, an increase of +.5%MoM. Overtime rose to 4.3 hours from 4.2 hours.
As expected, service jobs continue to be the main growth category, expanding at +135k in June following a gain of 199k in May. Retail jobs though fell by 24k in June, and temporary jobs declined by -8k. Despite weakness in the housing market, construction employment rose 12k, after falling 2k in May. Government jobs saw the largest increase since last September, rising +40k. Education/health/leisure/hospitality jobs all saw healthy gains in June, but remain near their three month trend growth levels.
Interest rates rose in reaction to the increase in jobs, higher wages, longer workweeks, and the unemployment rate hovering near a six year low. The yield on the 10y Treasury has risen 5bp since last night's close.
Friday, July 6, 2007
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