Today's disappointing jobs report confirms the loss of economic growth momentum that a number of other indicators were consistently pointing to in recent days. The key question at this stage is whether this is a temporary slowdown that will reverse in the second half of the year or something more enduring.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported the creation of 54 thousand jobs in May, significantly below the downwardly revised consensus expectation of about 160 thousand. Private sector jobs totaled 83 thousand, down from 251 thousand in April. The prior month's numbers were revised down, with April's gains coming down to 232 thousand from the originally reported 244 thousand level.
The number of private sector jobs in April was revised down to 251 thousand from 268 thousand. In another negative sign, the unemployment rate increased again to 9.1% from 9% in April.
In the run-up to today's jobs report, we had gotten an unusual confluence of soft economic readings over the last few weeks. These reports show a downtrend in consumer spending due to the high fuel costs, a double-dip in housing and, even more worryingly, a decelerating trend in the thus-far robust manufacturing end of the economy. These readings ran counter to expectations that the economy would spring back to robust growth in the current quarter following the anemic pace in the first quarter.
As a result, estimates for GDP growth for the current quarter have been coming down in recent days.
On the labor market front, the weekly jobless claims numbers have stubbornly remained above the 400 thousand level since early April after falling below that level consistently in the preceding months. But the most disappointing report on the labor market front was Wednesday's ADP surprise, which resulted in material downward adjustments to expectations for today's report.
The expectation for today's non-farm payroll report was the addition of around 190 thousand jobs before the ADP report. But the consensus estimate came down to about 160 thousand, post-ADP, with the whisper number more in the 100 thousand vicinity. We know now that the ADP surprise was right on the money.
On the earnings front, we got a better than expected report from Cooper Companies (COO) after the close on Thursday. The maker of contact lenses and other medical products came ahead of earnings and revenue expectations and guided higher. VeriFone (PAY), the maker of point-of-sale terminals, also beat EPS and revenue expectations.
On the IPO calendar, Groupon has filed to go public in the coming days. It will be interesting to see the type of reception that this much-anticipated IPO gets following LinkedIn's (LNKD) success.
Orbitz Worldwide (OWW) got relief from an Illinois court in its dispute with American Airlines (AMR), paving the way for AMR's flights to show up on the travel site. Shares of Apollo Group (APOL), ITT Educational Services (ESI) and other for-profit education companies will remain in the spotlight today as a key ruling from the U.S. Department of Education has turned out to be less severe than initially feared.
The major news of the day is the disappointing jobs report. This not only confirms the economic slowdown in the current period, but will cause further downward revisions to second-half growth expectations.Zacks Investment Research
| Find Winning Stocks Quickly with Research Wizard, a powerful desktop software program. Start with easy-to-use pre-loaded strategies, then develop your own. Backtest against years of historical data to see how your approach works in any market. Start a Free Trial Today >> |
|
Ride Momentum Stocks to Quick Gains! The market is finally breaking out, creating the perfectd wave for investing in momentum stocks. Zacks is the king of fundamental analysis, but this service also uses technical indicators for the best possible timing. Click here to learn more >>. |
| Make Big Bucks promoting Zacks products on your website! Click here to Learn about Zacks' Affiliate program. |
| Zacks Top Ten Stocks for 2011 are now available! This 10-stock portfolio is a well-balanced mix of aggressive and conservative, large and small cap, growth and value. Buy them. Hold them. Watch your gains add up |

Read Zacks_Analysts' blog in RSS

June 3, 2011
Share This