The January employment report, released this morning, must have
big grins on the faces of President Barack Obama and his campaign
staff. And despite the negative political implications (of helping
Obama’s reelection chances), I still can’t find myself rooting
against good economic news. The key is that this is happening
despite, not because of, Obama’s policies.
The month-over-month gain in non-farm payrolls came in at
243,000, far exceeding the highest estimate in Bloomberg’s survey
of economists, which was 189,000. Private sector payrolls came in
at 257,000, again far above estimates, and showing the additional
good news that government head counts are shrinking.
The unemployment rate was reported at 8.3%, matching the lowest
of the estimates. Average workweek length and average hourly
earnings were also very strong.
The political issue here, if this sort of economic trend were to
continue, is how Mitt Romney will make his case, which is primarily
an economic one, if the economy seems to be on a solid recovery
track. I do not believe this pace of improvement is sustainable.
Nevertheless, the argument that “this is the weakest recovery in
modern American history” is somewhat too subtle for the average
voter to understand.
The stock market is looking much stronger prior to Friday’s
open, though one has to wonder whether some of this good news was
already “baked in,” given the rally the market had earlier in the
week. I would not be surprised to see modest profit-taking by the
end of the day. That said, I think plenty of people will be caught
short here and if the market is still near its highs in the last 15
minutes, I think they’ll take it higher as the shorts are forced to
cover going into the weekend.
Government bond and note years are up modestly, and markets have
raised their bets on a Fed rate hike by the end of 2013 by about
25%, to a 100% chance of the Fed moving from a 0% target to a 0.25%
target. If anything, I think this may still represent lower
interest rates than we’ll see if the economy gains traction.
There are no two ways about it, at least from an economic point
of view: This was a great number, the best in years, and I’m very
glad more Americans are finding work. I just hope they don’t credit
President Obama.