Posts tagged ‘employment statistics’

ES Emini Day Trading: Pivot-Fed Announcements-Commentary

By , 25 November, 2009, No Comment

The Reuter’s/University of Michigan’s Consumer sentiment index for early November fell back a very steep 4.6 points to a very weak 66.0. Weakness was split between current conditions and the outlook. The retreat in confidence was tied to the still contracting jobs market.

Daily Pivot and Important Announcements

By , 29 October, 2009, No Comment
ESZ9
For 10/29/2009

How To Use
Symbol R1 R2 Pivot S1 S2
ESZ9 1055.00 1071.50 1046.50 1030.00 1021.50

Fed and Agency Announcements

GDP
[Report][Star]
8:30 AM ET
Jobless Claims
[Report][djStar]
8:30 AM ET

Tim Geithner Speaks
9:30 AM ET

Money Supply
[Bullet
4:30 PM ET

Tim Geithner Speaks
8:40 PM ET

Market Consensus Before Announcement-GDP
GDP was still barely in negative territory in the second quarter with the Commerce Department nudging up its third estimate to an annualized 0.7 percent decrease from the previous estimate of a 1.0 percent decline. Final sales were revised to be more positive at an annualized 0.7 percent gain in the second quarter, compared to the second estimate of a 0.4 percent gain. On the inflation front, the GDP price index was flat for the quarter. Looking ahead, traders are expecting the advance estimate for third quarter GDP to clearly establish that the economy was in recovery in the third quarter. The big question is by how much. Since this release is expected to show the first positive GDP growth since the second quarter of 2008, this report will get heightened attention.

Market Consensus Before Announcement-Jobless Claims
Initial jobless claims edged higher in the October 17 week, up 11,000 to 531,000. But the four-week average continued to move lower, down for the seventh week in a row to 532,250 for a decrease of about 20,000 from month-ago levels. Continuing claims dropped 98,000 for the October 10 week to 5.923 million, roughly 100,000 below month-ago levels. But reading the latest number is difficult due to an uncertain combination of new hiring and the expiration of benefits

Have We Moved Out of the Recession?

By , 17 October, 2009, No Comment

Anyway, I have been thinking about this run up in equities of late and wondering just exactly is the root cause of all this stock buying euphoria? I would also note that the volume on the run up has not always been overly impressive, and further, trading in the financial stocks has been much heavier than the norm.

Bull Market? Bear Market Rally?

By , 14 October, 2009, No Comment

Well, we have crossed the 10,000 point level on the Dow and the pundits are filling the pages of blogs and business magazines with predictions of all sorts. The question they are asking is a simple one, really. In the absence of any earthshaking news about positive developments in the economy, “what has caused this unprecedented run up?”

From Bloomberg: U.S. Job Losses May Be Even Larger, Model Breaks Down

By , 2 October, 2009, No Comment

Oct. 2 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. economic slump earlier this year was so severe it short-circuited the government’s model for calculating payrolls, raising the risk that today’s jobs report may be too optimistic.

About 824,000 more jobs may be subtracted from the payroll count for the 12 months through last March when the figures are officially revised early next year, a Labor Department report showed today. The revision would be the biggest since at least 1991.

The bulk of the miss occurred in the calculations for the first quarter of this year, the Labor Department said. The economy shrank at a 6.4 percent annual pace in the first three months of 2009, the worst performance since 1982.

The figures raise the possibility that the government’s calculations continue to miss the mark.

“We are probably still underestimating job losses,” said John Silvia, chief economist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC in Charlotte, North Carolina. “There could be another 30,000 to 40,000” that the data isn’t picking up, he said.

That would mean the loss of jobs for September could turn out to be as high as 300,000, rather than the 263,000 reported today by the Labor Department. Today’s report also showed the jobless rate climbed to 9.8 percent last month, a 26-year high.

The potential revision for the year through last March would mean that the economy lost 5.6 million jobs for the period instead of the 4.8 million now on the books.

Companies Surveyed

The payroll estimates are based on a government survey of about 160,000 businesses and government agencies covering around 400,000 worksites.

Once a year, the Labor Department revises its payroll figures after combing through tax records from the unemployment insurance program that covers practically all businesses. Those records are only available after a lag, explaining why it takes more than a year to make the tabulations.

The department uses a formula, known as the birth/death model, to determine the influence on payrolls from the formation and demise of businesses.

Because the government doesn’t know if a company fails to respond because it has gone out of business or is just late, it estimates the number of companies that may have folded. By the same token, it plugs in an estimate for the formation of new businesses to account for their hiring.

From April 2008 through December, the tax records showed the Labor Department’s figures overestimated payrolls by about 150,000, said Chris Manning, the national benchmark branch chief at the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That implies the estimates missed the mark by about 675,000 in the first quarter of this year, which currently shows a 2.1 million drop in payrolls.

Not Working ‘Well’

“In this period of steep job losses, the birth/death model didn’t work as well as it usually does,” Manning said in an interview. “To the extent that there was an overstatement in the birth/death model, that is likely to still be there.”

The model added about 184,000 jobs to the payroll total last quarter compared with a 135,000 increase in the same period in 2008, before the financial crisis deepened with the collapse of Lehman Brothers Inc.

“This birth/death model is still assuming that we are getting new jobs from new-business creations,” David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff & Associates Inc. in Toronto, said in an interview.

‘Alice in Wonderland’

“These additions are coming somewhere from ‘Alice in Wonderland,’” he said, referring to the novel by Lewis Carroll detailing the adventures of a girl that fell down a rabbit hole into a fantasy world.

“Even though the current data is bad, the numbers are actually even worse,” Rosenberg said.

Wells Fargo’s Silvia says the birth/death calculation isn’t the only thing that’s broken as many companies are also discarding their business models.

Companies “really have diminished their willingness to hire labor for any production level,” Silvia said. “It’s really a strategic change,” where companies will be keeping fewer employees for any particular level of sales, in good times and bad, he said.

Easy AdSense by Unreal