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Complete Non-Farm Payrolls Report Preview

Tyler Durden's picture




 

Many thought Goldman was joking when, in its preview of today's delayed September NFP, it essentially said the number doesn't matter - it will be bullish no matter what (a +1 million print will be bearish as it means 2 million have to reenter the workforce now that the labor participation rate is an issue, as opposed to 2010 when it was only mentioned on Zero Hedge; a -1 million print will mean taper in 2099; both numbers will be spun as better than in reality due to the government shutdown that did not even take place in the month of September) as it means more Fed, more of the time. Sadly, in central-planning that pretty much covers it up. For everyone wanting some more info on what to expect in under half an hour, here is the full breakdown from RanSquawk.

September US Non-Farm Payrolls

  • US Change in Nonfarm Payrolls (Sep) M/M Exp. 180k, Low 100k, High 256k (Prev. 169k, Jul 104k)
  • US Unemployment Rate (Sep) M/M Exp. 7.3%, Low 7.1%, High 7.4% (Prev. 7.3%, Jul 7.4%)

"Safety in Numbers" estimates by bank:

  • Deutsche Bank 170k
  • Bank of America 170k
  • HSBC 171k
  • Citigroup 180k
  • UBS 195k
  • JP Morgan 195k
  • Barclays 200k
  • Goldman Sachs 200k

The September nonfarm payrolls report will be released today, eleven days later than originally scheduled, after a bipartisan agreement was reached to reopen the US government.

The release, as has become the norm, will be used to gauge when the Fed will begin to reduce its QE3 programme. However, amid the fiscal dysfunction on Capitol Hill, several FOMC members noted that delays to key macroeconomic data due to the shutdown may prevent the Fed from making informed changes to its policy measures. Furthermore, a very similar budgetary stand-off in the US may well be seen in the new year, with last week’s deal being just a temporary measure to fund the government until mid-January. As a result, many analysts have pushed back their forecasts for a reduction in Fed bond-buying.

Last month, 169k jobs were added, lower than the expected 180k and the previous month was given a large downward revision. The unemployment rate declined to 7.3% from 7.4% in July; however, this was attributed to a decline in the labour force participation rate.

The September ADP employment reading, which is calculated using a very similar methodology to nonfarm payrolls, came in at 166k, missing the median expectation of 180k, with the previous reading also seeing a significant downward revision. As has been seen in many of this year’s NFP readings, the ADP release suggested that US labour market activity is continuing to soften. US government austerity measures prior to the shutdown, as well as the recent rise in rates, appear to have dampened the recovery. It may also have been hampered by investor concern over the approaching budgetary gridlock that had been on the horizon for many months.

Market Reaction

As mentioned, many participants believe the Fed will be reluctant to reduce QE given the uncertainty over both the economic effects of the shutdown and the outcome when the temporary deal lapses. If that is the case, a reasonably strong reading could boost sentiment, lifting stocks and weighing on bonds in a knee-jerk reaction. But with stocks at near-all-time highs, there may be little scope for further upside. Conversely, a very strong number, significantly above the majority of expectations, has the potential to induce forecasts for a QE reduction. If so, considerable downside risks would be posed to fixed income. However, a very large beat on expectations would be required for the US 10-year yield to reach the 2.75% level seen during last week’s Washington turmoil.

 

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Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:20 | 4078834 GetZeeGold
GetZeeGold's picture

 

 

Screw that.....how much QE is slated for the gold suppression?

 

I've got some dry powder and I'm looking to go shopping!

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:33 | 4078904 TeamDepends
TeamDepends's picture

Brother, metals just spiked up!  Lord, let this be the day (on knees).

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:18 | 4078842 LawsofPhysics
LawsofPhysics's picture

Nice to see that JPM is optimistic, I wonder why....

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:21 | 4078853 TeamDepends
TeamDepends's picture

It is their battalion of attorneys, mostly, who are optimistic.

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:29 | 4078887 Sudden Debt
Sudden Debt's picture

I'VE HEARD 880.000 IDIOTS GOT A GOVERNMENT JOB LAST WEEK!!

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:34 | 4078910 Stoploss
Stoploss's picture

LOL!!!

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:21 | 4078850 Stuart
Stuart's picture

This monthly circus, the entire financial world waiting with bated breath for some BLS number is ridiculous.  Especially when it is so well publicized how that number is basically a guess to start with then subject of all sorts of adjustments, some of which simply to inject political bias and spin into the reporting.  The world's gone mad.

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:29 | 4078884 onewayticket2
onewayticket2's picture

the "number" should be Full Time Equivalents....FTE.....meaning that if you have two part timers, it equals one full time job.

 

think we'd still be at 200k, Goldman?  more like 125k

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:30 | 4078891 kridkrid
kridkrid's picture

Bingo. It's all for show. It's meant to keep people safely corralled... consuming numbers that aren't real so as not to observe the reality around them. It's all part of the grand illusion. We are playing a game of make-believe with our debt fueled consumption eCONomy. It's running on QE fumes, providing a sense of normalcy, ready to collapse.

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:22 | 4078856 thismarketisrigged
thismarketisrigged's picture

all i know is 300,000 or 300 jobs added, it does not matter, markets will be way in the green today as this fucking bubble grows larger and larger by the day.

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:23 | 4078859 wagthetails
wagthetails's picture

I'll go with GS, as they probably helped write the number today. 

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:28 | 4078880 Sudden Debt
Sudden Debt's picture

NON-FARM PAYROLL = LONG TERM UNEMPLOYED SHEEPS NOT INCLUDED

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:28 | 4078883 Stoploss
Stoploss's picture

Yeah, fuck all this shit. Better be getting your protection in order if your inside the city.

Cutting EBT on Nov 1 by $40.

Get ready.

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:34 | 4078906 Sudden Debt
Sudden Debt's picture

IT'S THE RICH BASTARDS WHO ACTUALLY WORK FOR A LIVING WHO ARE BEHIND ALL OF THAT!!!

TAX THEM 100% AND THAT EBT PAY CUT DOESN'T NEED TO HAPPEN!!

WHAT WOULD STALIN AND LENIN DO??!!

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:29 | 4078888 Rehab Willie
Rehab Willie's picture

Pick a number from a hat day again

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:31 | 4078893 mtremus
mtremus's picture

can't any of them think for themselves?

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:32 | 4078900 Obchelli
Obchelli's picture

Hillarious missing on everything downward revisions and market shoots up and this idiots on CNBC do not even comment on this BS.

Shows how QE driven this rally is

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:36 | 4078917 FreeBull
FreeBull's picture

The jobs numbers from these banks should tell everyone how OUT OF TOUCH they really are...by the way has anybody seen how gold has rocketed up since the jobs anouncement...http://goo.gl/6o4tpQ

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 08:37 | 4078930 Ponzi Pontiff
Ponzi Pontiff's picture

An opaque entity, a law unto itself, in cahoots with other organs of its ever growing reach, announces a bunch of numbers on a given day and time.  People bet on these numbers, unaware of the manipulation going on to increase the take for the insiders and friends.

That was how the mafiosi did it anyway.  Obviously, the BLS - and .gov (especially NSA, "Hi guys!") - would never manipulate or deceive.

Tue, 10/22/2013 - 11:06 | 4079472 thewayitis
thewayitis's picture

 

  LOL   Notice The large banks trying to PUMP .....HAHAHA Goldman, UBS, JPMorgan Barclays . Assholes  

 

 

 

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