You are here

Business

Where The September Jobs Were: Waiter And Bartender Devastation

Where The September Jobs Were: Waiter And Bartender Devastation

The September jobs report was a bizarre exercise in "goalseeked" data: from the first drop in Establishment Survey payrolls in 7 years, to the near record monthly surge in full-time jobs and Household Survey employment, to the erroneous calculation in average hourly earnings, virtually everything about the latest payrolls report was off.

Still, accurate or fabricated, here is the breakdown of the seasonally-adjusted job gains and losses that took place in the hurricane-impacted month.

Federal Reserve President Kashkari's Masterful Distractions

Federal Reserve President Kashkari's Masterful Distractions

Authored by MN Gordon via EconomicPrism.com,

How is it that seemingly intelligent people, of apparent sound mind and rational thought, can stray so far off the beam?  How come there are certain professions that reward their practitioners for their failures?

The central banking and monetary policy vocation rings the bell on both accounts.  Today we offer a brief case study in this regard.

Goldman Raises December Rate Hike Odds To 80%

Goldman Raises December Rate Hike Odds To 80%

Having pointed out a glaring error in today's payrolls report, which indicated that there was at least one math error in calculating the average hourly earnings number, and as a result casts doubt on every other piece of data released by the BLS, we urge algos and the handful of carbon-based traders, to take anything released by the BLS with a boulder of salt, especially data on wage inflation, until the BLS provides an explanation for what is going on.

What Hurricane: Full-Time Jobs Soar By 935,000, Biggest Increase In The 21st Century

What Hurricane: Full-Time Jobs Soar By 935,000, Biggest Increase In The 21st Century

Not only was there much confusion ahead of the September payrolls report, there was just as much confusion inside it, because while the market decided to ignore the 33,000 drop in payrolls (as per the Establishment Survey), the first monthly decline in 7 years and instead focus on the just as widely expected spike in average hourly earnings, a result of hurricane-induced labor shortages, what it appears to have forgotten is the "other" Household Survey, which showed a vastly different picture.

Pages