
The US employment situation in August is neither good nor bad, and the extent of interest rate cuts still remains uncertain

The US August non-farm payroll data performed poorly, with only 142,000 new jobs added, below the expected 160,000, and the unemployment rate dropped to 4.2%. This data did not alleviate market concerns about a recession, leading to a decline in US stocks and gold, while the US dollar and US bond yields rose. The possibility of a 50bp or 25bp rate cut by the Federal Reserve still remains uncertain, and in the short term, attention should be paid to the CPI data on September 11th, which will impact the policy decision on September 18th. Overall, although there are signs of a slowdown in the US economy, it has not entered a recession yet, and the market needs further observation
Key Points
-
In August, the US added 142,000 non-farm jobs, lower than the expected 160,000 but higher than the previous 89,000. The data for the previous two months was revised down by a total of 86,000. The unemployment rate was 4.2%, in line with expectations and lower than the previous 4.3%. Average hourly wages increased by 0.4% month-on-month, higher than the expected 0.3% and the previous 0.2%. It is worth noting that the unemployment rate this month still triggers the "Sam Rule".
-
After the data was released, US stocks and gold fell, the US dollar index and US bond yields rose. The market's expectations for a Fed rate cut did not change much, with the probability of a 100-125 basis point cut within the year and a 50 basis point cut in September at around 30%.
-
Overall, the US employment data for August was not bad, showing some improvement compared to the previous month, confirming the weather disturbances in July. However, the data was not strong enough to dispel market concerns about a US recession, indicating that the market needs to observe more data to confirm or refute recession expectations. Risk appetite remains under pressure in the short term, and the "recession trade" may continue.
-
Recent high-frequency indicators for the US economy and employment have shown improvement. The Fed's model predicts that the actual GDP growth rate for the third quarter will still be above 2%. Although the US economy is slowing down, it is far from a recession. There is still a divergence in the market on whether the Fed will cut rates by 50 basis points or 25 basis points. Focus will be on the US CPI data for August released on 9/11, which will provide important guidance for the rate cut decision at the Fed's meeting on 9/18.
Main Content
1. Job growth in the US improved in August but was weaker than expected, and the unemployment rate slightly decreased but still triggered the "Sam Rule".
Overall employment performance: In August, the US added 142,000 non-farm jobs, lower than the expected 160,000. The data for July and June were revised down from 114,000 and 179,000 to 89,000 and 118,000, respectively, with a total downward revision of 86,000. The unemployment rate was 4.2%, in line with expectations and lower than the previous 4.3%, marking the second highest since November 2021. The labor force participation rate was 62.7%, in line with expectations and the previous value. Average weekly hours worked were 34.3, in line with expectations and slightly higher than the previous 34.2 hours. Average hourly wages increased by 0.4% month-on-month, higher than the expected 0.3%, the previous 0.2%, and the 12-month average of 0.3%. It is worth noting that after the unemployment rate triggered the "Sam Rule" last month, the conditions for the "Sam Rule" are still met this month (the 3-month moving average of the unemployment rate has risen by more than 0.5% from the low point of the past 12 months).

