Latest labor market data is sending mixed signals to traders. Nonfarm productivity came in at 4.9% versus the 5.0% expectation, slightly underperforming against the prior reading of 4.1%. Meanwhile, unit labor costs took a sharper turn than anticipated, declining 1.9% when markets were bracing for just a -0.1% dip compared to the previous -2.9% drop. The divergence between productivity and wage pressures could reshape Fed policy expectations and ripple through risk assets. Tighter unit labor costs typically ease inflation concerns, but the productivity shortfall raises questions about economic momentum heading into Q2.
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ProofOfNothing
· 01-11 13:04
Productivity fell short of expectations, but labor costs plummeted by 1.9%—this data seems contradictory. The Federal Reserve must be worried again.
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BTCRetirementFund
· 01-11 11:29
Productivity is dropping again, but wages are actually getting cheaper? To hedge this out, the Fed will probably have to cut interest rates...
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AmateurDAOWatcher
· 01-10 05:41
Productivity didn't meet expectations, and labor costs plummeted. What should we do... Which way should the Fed lean?
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InfraVibes
· 01-08 14:02
Productivity didn't meet expectations, and labor costs have instead taken a huge plunge. These data points are indeed quite shocking.
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tx_or_didn't_happen
· 01-08 13:58
Productivity data is disappointing, and wage costs are plummeting instead. What's the outlook for this market... The Fed will have to recalculate their figures again.
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HappyToBeDumped
· 01-08 13:51
Productivity data didn't meet expectations, and labor costs have dropped so sharply... What's your take on this? Does the Fed need to adjust its pace?
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MetaNeighbor
· 01-08 13:46
Productivity didn't meet expectations again, and labor costs actually dropped so much? It's really hard to say what the Fed will do this time.
Latest labor market data is sending mixed signals to traders. Nonfarm productivity came in at 4.9% versus the 5.0% expectation, slightly underperforming against the prior reading of 4.1%. Meanwhile, unit labor costs took a sharper turn than anticipated, declining 1.9% when markets were bracing for just a -0.1% dip compared to the previous -2.9% drop. The divergence between productivity and wage pressures could reshape Fed policy expectations and ripple through risk assets. Tighter unit labor costs typically ease inflation concerns, but the productivity shortfall raises questions about economic momentum heading into Q2.