Macro
The main news of the week was the NFP data, which came in much better than expected as the US economy added 254K jobs in September, well above forecasts of 140K. In addition, several months’ worth of NFP releases saw upside revisions, when figures for July were revised up by 55K from 89K to 144K and August’s previous NFP total was lifted by an additional 17K, from 142K to 159K. The unemployment rate fell again from 4.2% to 4.1%, confirming that the labour market is in good shape.
Earlier in the week, we got numbers that pointed to a strong labour market. First, on Tuesday, the numbers came out about the number of job openings, which rose by 329,000 to 8.040 million in August 2024 from an upwardly revised 7.711 million in July and above market expectations of 7.655 million. On Wednesday, ADP reported that private businesses in the US added 143K workers to their payrolls in September 2024, the most in three months, following an upwardly revised 103K in August and well above forecasts of 120K.
The annual inflation rate in the euro area fell to 1.8%, below the ECB’s inflation target and the lowest since April 2021. Core inflation fell to 2.7%, even, the lowest since February 2021.
PMI data from the ISM indicated that US services activity grew in September at the fastest pace since February last year, while the manufacturing PMI continued to point to a contraction in the manufacturing sector, which now extended for six straight months. PMIs in the euro area and the UK were similar, with service sector activity slipping slightly but remaining steady and at 50 points.