The appointment of Jerome “Jay” Powell as Fed chair should result in a smooth transition for monetary policy into early 2017. However, other personnel changes mean greater policy uncertainty as one looks beyond the middle of next year. This comes at a time when the risks of a policy error are increasing.
[REITS]Nonfarm payrolls rose by 228,000 in the initial estimate for November (median forecast: +200,000). Unadjusted payrolls rose by 532,000 (vs. 424,000 a year ago). Unadjusted “holiday” payrolls (retail + couriers) rose by 521,600 (vs. 438,100 a year ago) accounting for much of the strength in the adjusted number. Seasonally adjusted, private-sector payrolls averaged a 173,000 gain over the last three months, vs. +170,000 over the first eight months of 2017, the same pace as in 2016. These figures are subject to revision (and the Bureau of Labor Statistics has indicated that the March 2017 level of payrolls is expected to be revised about 95,000) higher, but the longer-term trend appears to be lower, as one would expect if the labor market is tightening. Still, the payroll data for 2017 suggest that there was more slack in the labor market than was commonly believed at the start of the year. Remember, the growth in the working-age population is consistent with monthly growth in payrolls of a little less than 100,000. Eventually, a tight labor market will restrain the pace of job growth
Average hourly earnings rose 0.2% in the initial estimate for November, as expected, but figures for September and October were revised a bit lower, leaving the year-over-year pace at 2.5% – not terrible, but not particularly strong either. Wage growth is thought to be restrained by a shift in bargaining power in recent decades (lower union membership, a greater concentration of large firms), but demographics could also be at play (older, higher-paid employees exit the labor force, while younger, lower-paid workers enter). Increases in minimum wages are expected to add to overall wage growth in early 2018.
While nominal (current dollar) wage growth has been moderate in recent months, real (constant dollar) wage growth has been relatively lackluster. Inflation may be low, but it’s not trivial. Adjusted for inflation, aggregate wages and salaries were reported to have risen 2.1% over the 12 months ending in October. This is the main fuel for consumer spending growth, and consumer spending accounts for nearly 70% of GDP.
Read the full article here by Scott Brown of Raymond James, Advisor Perspectives