The US economy has officially entered a recession and the labor market
numbers that are due on Friday will confirm that. Not only do we expect the US
economy to report its eleventh consecutive month of job losses but the job
losses will probably be the largest in 26 years. In 2001, there was a single
month job loss of 325k, but we expect the jobs lost in November to be more than
the -343k decline that we saw back in July 1982. There will also be no
capitulation bottom when it comes to the labor market, which means that even if
non-farm payrolls drop by more than 350k, any bounce thereafter would only be a
precursor to another major decline. A weak number would weigh heavily on the US
dollar against the Japanese Yen and boost expectations for a 75bp rate cut by
the Federal Reserve on December 16th.
How the Dollar May React to
NFPs
Although the reaction in USD/JPY may be consistent with a weak number, the
dollar’s performance against the Euro and British pound could be more erratic.
If non-farm payrolls fall by more than -375k, it would be initially negative for
the US dollar, but when the US stock market opens, we could see the dollar
rally. Traders need to remember that the dollar is appreciating not because of
the strength of the US economy, but because money flocks into low yielding
currencies during a global recession. In a very short period of time, the US
dollar has become the second lowest yielding G7 currency. A weak labor market
number will mean two things – more weakness for US equities and the possibility
of the Federal Reserve taking interest rates to zero. By extension, it will lead
to weakness in USD/JPY, EUR/USD, GBP/USD and all of the Japanese Yen Crosses.
The only way to avoid another round of selling would be if non-farm payrolls
dropped by less than 300k.
Of the 70 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg, 9 expect Non-Farm Payrolls to drop
by 400k or more. The most pessimistic is the Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi who is
calling for a mind boggling decline of 470k. The most optimistic is Landesbank
in Berlin who is only calling for a decline of -220k.
Why Unemployment Could Hit a 15 Year High
All of the leading indicators for non-farm payrolls point to a very weak
number. The employment component of service sector ISM, which is one of the
strongest leading indicators for payrolls dropped to a record low. The same was
true for the ADP private sector employment report which fell 250k – remember
that ADP has historically undershot non-farm payrolls. Layoffs have jumped 148
percent, the 4 week average of jobless claims hit a 26 year high while consumer
confidence plunged to a 28 year low. There is some good news though. Continuing
claims have fallen, but unfortunately that was off of the highest level since
December 1982.