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Thursday data: Prelude to payrolls



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U.S. stock indexes rise; Nasdaq out front

Tech up most among S&P sectors; materials biggest laggard

STOXX 600 down 0.2%

Dollar ~flat; gold, crude down; bitcoin up ~3%

U.S. 10-year Treasury yield up at 4.63%

Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of markets brought to you by Reuters reporters. You can share your thoughts with us at markets.research@thomsonreuters.com


THURSDAY DATA: PRELUDE TO PAYROLLS

A swath of economic data was released on Thursday, most of which behaved by not delivering any surprises of note.

Most of which, not all.

Labor costs USLCP=ECI surged in the first three months of the year, rising 4.7% after remaining unchanged in Q4 2023 and breezing past the 3.3% increase analysts expected.

For its part, productivity growth USPROP=ECI decelerated to 0.3% on the heels of the prior quarter's 3.5% increase.

It was a weaker reading than the 0.8% growth economists forecast.

The two metrics tend to move like a see-saw; when productivity dips, labor costs rise and vice versa. And the two are nearing an equanimity, according to Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.

"(The) jump in unit labor costs is chiefly the consequence of the temporary slowing in productivity growth," Shepherdson writes, adding that the report "supports the Fed's view that the labor market has moved into better balance."

The number of U.S. workers to join the unemployment line last week USJOB=ECI was a repeat of the previous week's 208,000 landing below the 212,000 consensus, according to the Labor Department.

But the underlying trend, as expressed by the 4-week moving average of initial claims, is downward.

While ordinarily a shorter queue outside the unemployment office is a happy sight, it speaks to the ongoing labor market tightness identified by Powell & Co as a barrier to reining in inflation.

Ongoing claims USJOBN=ECI, reported on a one-week lag, was - oddly enough - also a repeat of the 1.774 million of the week prior.

"The numbers speak for themselves," says a note from Jefferies' U.S. Economics team, headed by Thomas Simons. "The data shows no evidence of increasing layoffs or increasing friction against people finding a new job after losing one."

Speaking of losing jobs - in April, corporate America announced it would axe 64,789 jobs, according to executive outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas (CGC).

That's 28% fewer than in March, and 3.3% below the April 2023 reading.

Total planned layoffs year-to-date are off 4.6% from the first four months in 2023.

"The labor market remains tight," writes Andrew Challenger, senior vice president at CGC. "But as labor costs continue to rise, companies will be slower to hire, and we expect further cuts will be needed."

"This low April figure may be the calm before the storm."

So far this year, technology, government and financial sectors have suffered the most job cuts.

All of this is prologue to tomorrow's employment report, which is expected to show the U.S. economy added 243,000 jobs in April as the unemployment rate held firm at 3.8%.

Moving on to international trade, the gap between the value of goods and services imported to the U.S. and those exported abroad narrowed in March by a barely perceptible 0.1% to $69.4 billion.

Beneath that tranquil topline, weakening demand appears to be responsible for imports and exports to have declined by 1.6% and 2.0%, respectively.

Net exports detracted 0.9 percentage points from first-quarter GDP, according to the Commerce Department's preliminary take on the data released last week.

And finally, new orders from U.S. factories USFORD=ECI stuck the landing by increasing 1.6% in March, just as analysts predicted.

(Stephen Culp)

*****


FOR THURSDAY'S EARLIER LIVE MARKETS POSTS:


WALL STREET EYES A DOVISH WAIT - CLICK HERE


U.S. INDEX FUTURES CLIMB EARLY AS INVESTORS DIGEST FED - CLICK HERE


A BALANCING ACT TO LURE INFLOWS INTO UK EQUITIES - CLICK HERE


THE UK HAS ITS PREMIUM STOCKS TOO! - CLICK HERE


POST-DATA PRICE ACTION SUGGESTS STAGFLATION FEARS - UBS -CLICK HERE


SCOPE FOR MORE EPS UPGRADES IN EUROPE - BOFA - CLICK HERE


STOXX GOING NOWHERE, "LOW QUALITY BEAT" FOR NOVO - CLICK HERE

EUROPE EYES MUTED START POST-FED - CLICK HERE

INTERVENE, RINSE, REPEAT - CLICK HERE


Wall Street rises as investors read Fed tea leaves https://tmsnrt.rs/4doojBv

Productivity and labor costs https://reut.rs/4bnxxfN

Jobless claims and planned layoffs https://reut.rs/4dljn0q

Trade balance https://reut.rs/4a4911W

Factory orders https://reut.rs/4b4N0S3

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