Archive - Jun 5, 2015 - Story

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May Wage Growth Concentrated Among "Supervisors, Bosses"; Full-Time Jobs Still Below 2007 Peak





The one data point in today's otherwise impressive jobs report which may generate some skepticism about an imminent rate hike is that while full-time jobs did grow at a brisk 630K pace in May as part-time jobs this month tumbled, the total number of full-time jobs at 121.4 million is still about half a million below their pre-recession peak of 121.9 million reached in November 2007.

 

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"Good" Jobs Reports Sparks Market Turmoil As Rate Hike Draws Closer





Despite the rise in the unemployment rate - which by now become nothing more than a joke - the jobs report (at the headline level) was too good for the bulls demding moar for longer. The kneejerk reaction was a selloff in bonds, commodities, and stocks as the dollar surged amid rate hike delay hopes. As time passed stocks bounced back a little but bond yields and the dollar continue to press notably higher and crude has given up all its OPEC gains.

 

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US Adds 280K Jobs In May, Much Higher Than Expected, Yellen Gets Green Light To Hike





Contrary to expectations of a modest 226K increase in nonfarm payrolls, according to the BLS in May the US added a whopping 280K jobs, with the April print revised from 223K to 221K, but March revised higher from 85K to 119K. This was the highest monthly increase in payrolls since December of 2014.  The unemployment rate rose from 5.4% to 5.5% on the number, as the number of employed Americans according to the Household Survey also rose by an almost equal 272K.

 

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OPEC - As Expected - Maintains Production At 30 Million Barrels, Crude Pops





When OPEC did not cut production last November, the oil market collapsed in shock and awe that the cartel would not just give in and allow non-OPEC members to walk away with market share. Today, in Vienna, "exactly as expected," OPEC once again confirmed production will remasin at 30 million barrels per day in the face of the global oil glut and prices for WTI and Brent have jumped $0.50 to $1.00 (we presume on machines and removal of a worst case boost to production).

 

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Tsipras Plays Putin Pivot Card; Tests Parliament's Patience On Troika Proposal





Greek PM Alexis Tsipras is set to address parliament Friday as difficult discussions with creditors have reached yet another stalemate. In Germany, some reports suggest there's now tension between German Chancelor Angela Merkel and FinMin Wolfgang Schaeuble regarding how the EU paymaster should handle Greece going forward. Meanwhile, Tsipras and Putin will hold a phone call Friday to discuss "business and energy." 

 

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Frontrunning: June 5





  • Europe shares set for worst week of 2015 (Reuters)
  • Jobs Report Not Likely to Trigger June Rate Hike (Hilsenrath)
  • U.S. jobs market seen firming despite lackluster growth (Reuters)
  • Gross Says Bond Rout Scary as Hell Even Without Bear Market (BBG)
  • Apple Is the New Pimco, and Tim Cook Is the New King of Bonds (BBG), which ZH said in 2013
  • In 'year of Apple Pay', many top retailers remain skeptical (Reuters)
  • OPEC Nations Signal Few Prospects for Oil-Production Change (BBG)
  • China regulator says amending rules on margin trading, short selling  (Reuters)
 

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What Wall Street Expects From Today's Payrolls Number, And Why It May Be Overly Optimistic





The most important not yet double seasonally-adjusted economic datapoint is upon us: in 90 minutes the BLS will report the May payrolls number which consensus expects to rise by 225K, (range of 140K to 305K), barely unchanged from April's 223K. The meaningless unemployment rate is expected to remain unchanged at 5.4%, even as the number of people not in the labor force likely will rise to a new record high. The most important variable, however, will be the hourly earnings with consensus expecting a 0.2% increase for all workers (the non-supervisory workers category is a different story entirely), up from the 0.1% increase in April.

 

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Futures Slump, Bund Selling Resumes With All Eyes On The Jobs Number





After yesterday's unprecedented volatility fireworks across all markets and continents, today so far has been a modest disappointment, with no crashes and subsequent surges in China, where the Politburo's only achievement was keeping the bubble dream alive by pushing the Shanghai Composite over 5,000 for the first time since January 2008, closing the index 1.5% higher on the day - a very modest gain by China's recent blow-off top standards.  Europe, too, has been relatively tame with the 10 Year Bund starting off on the wrong foot, the yield rising back above 0.91% before once again dipping to the upper 0.8% range, tracking the move in the EURUSD tick for tick, which also is a tractor beam for the US 10 Year. On the equity, front, things are just as muted, with futures at the Low of Day as of this moment, despite yesterday's last minute manic buying spree, the S&P set to open below 2100 as a result.

 
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