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Hiring Surged in February as Lockdown Restrictions Eased; NFP up 379,000

Published 03/05/2021, 08:34 AM
Updated 03/05/2021, 08:36 AM
© Reuters.

By Geoffrey Smith 

Investing.com -- Hiring in the U.S. economy accelerated sharply in February, reviving hopes of a rapid recovery from the winter wave of layoffs due to Covid-19 restrictions.

Nonfarm payrolls expanded by 379,000 through the middle of the month, almost double the 182,000 consensus forecast. The number for January was also revised sharply by higher by over 100,000 to 166,000.

The data reflected the gradual reopening of parts of the U.S. economy as the pressure on the country's hospitals eased off during the month. Gross gains in services employment totaled 513,000, with the leisure and hospitality sector alone adding 355,000 jobs as bars and restaurants resumed business, albeit often still under capacity constraints.

The figures are likely to reinforce concerns that the Federal Reserve will start to withdraw monetary stimulus from the economy sooner than originally planned. In a speech on Thursday, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell had again said that he wanted to see substantial progress in bringing down unemployment before thinking about tightening monetary policy.  Powell has repeatedly stressed that the U.S. is still operating with around 10 million fewer jobs, relative to its pre-pandemic state.

The unemployment rate fell to 6.2% from 6.3% in January, while the broader U6 measure of joblessness, which captures a broader sample of underemployment, remained steady at 11.1%. The labor force participation rate stayed at 61.4%. 

The numbers emboldened those willing to be on higher interest rates: 10-year U.S. Treasury yields rose to 1.58% from 1.56% immediately before the release, while five-year yields, which are more sensitive to expectations of changes in Fed policy, rose 4 basis points to 0.84%. They've now risen some 15 basis points this week. 

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Latest comments

Another phony headline being used as window dressing to pump in FED stimulus
Tattoo parlors, hairdressers and bars are the economies of a Banana Republic..But it does makes sense since we are the biggest Banana Republic country on this planet.
Wheres trump we need him. Biden adm ****
Unemployment rate 6.2% and we are supposed to cheer a couple hundred thousand bar and waitressing jobs!?
Inflation is about to be insane
almost 75% of jobs were in foodservice.
Hot money coming back to America!
Labor participation rate still *******
you might think this is good for the stocks but its not. This is another confirmation that the wages may rise and that is more crucial for the yields to rise than the inflation talk. that is bad for stocks, good for bonds, in the short term at least until the yields rise too fast too soon.
during the past 12-14 months I have learned that logic reasoning does not apply to the stock market. In fact, many times the opposite happened of what seemed to be logical
So they had lockdowns under Trump that they lift right after biden inauguration. Based on no new data. sounds about right?
Bingo!
No new data apart from infection rates going way down? Stop playing the victim all time to you silly MA GA Y lackeys never stop crying worst than liberals he lost get over it
Spot on Samui. Most Republicans live in the past. Some in the Trump-era, most of them however are stuck in the 19th century
So they rigged everything to make Joe look better.
790K first time unemployment filers over a 4 week average, it is over 825k at 8 weeks. The hiring numbers are very low and manipulated at that.
286k were bartenders and waiters
This is still really low in comparison to past 6 months? Set a low expectation, and you’ll beat it.
What will happen with the gbp
Of course it's sell the good news. Bond yield spike, Index and Stock crash upon these news. The market is nuts
 If there were real inflation fears gold would be surging. Instead it's tanking. Like I said, the market is nuts
 gold does not give you fixed income + interest. but I see your point
 Gold is the ultimate hedge against inflation and dollar erosion. If there are fears of inflation then by default the gold price should not be falling. Instead we are seeing rising bond yields because there is a buyer shortage, that only Federal government stimulus can fix (with short term sticking plasters). The USD benefits from the higher bond yields but don't be fooled into thinking this is a flight to dollar safety. As soon as those yields unwind back down, the USD Index will trend lower and then we might see some balance in the precious metal pricing.
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