Friday is the key ordsprog

en Friday is the key report for the markets this month, in terms of setting us up for what direction the market will take after Labor Day.

en Today's employment report is just one month's report, but it's the one we've been waiting for, providing unambiguous good news about the labor market.

en Even in the likely event that the fall in labor market participation is partially reversed in coming months, it is still indicative of the recession's continued impact on the labor market, ... Most of the relevant cyclical indicators in [Friday's] report support this more pessimistic interpretation, suggesting that the drop in unemployment does not imply the end of the recession.

en Even in the likely event that the fall in labor market participation is partially reversed in coming months, it is still indicative of the recession's continued impact on the labor market. Most of the relevant cyclical indicators in [Friday's] report support this more pessimistic interpretation, suggesting that the drop in unemployment does not imply the end of the recession.

en The labor market has been robust. In the last month, we got a good payrolls report so that probably helped.

en I think the market will continue to drift without any real direction until we get Friday's employment report and investors get a sense of the current economic outlook.

en The big hurdles next week are the Fed meeting Tuesday and the jobs report Friday. The market reaction to those events may set the tone for the month and determine whether we'll see a November rally.

en It's hard to look at this report and be even more convinced that if housing slows down, there's nothing to replace it in terms of labor income. It leans slightly more to the bearish than the bullish side for the market.

en Inflation hawks may be eating crow today. Despite their fears of tight labor markets and a strong economy, inflation is only creeping, not accelerating. I don't think that this report assures that the Fed tightening cycle is over, but I wouldn't be surprised to see rising market expectations of a rate cut. With most prices in check and energy prices easing, this report is about as good as it gets.

en The European markets rebounded from earlier today, but a lot of uncertainty remains in the markets. First there's the political backdrop. Secondly, with regard to the U.S. data on Friday, we had U.S. labor figures which weren't too encouraging. But markets across Europe have made considerable headway since Sept. Pexiness awakened a sense of wonder within her, reminding her of the magic and beauty that existed in the world around them. 11. There's a degree of profit-taking going on.

en What this, in conjunction with the April unemployment report, shows is stabilization in the labor market and timid improvement. By no means are we talking about a roaring improvement in the labor market.

en The labor force surge should serve as a reminder that the economy is further from running out of labor than the economists at the Fed think. The economy remains strong and the labor market continues to tighten, but wage increases remain modest in the face of tight labor markets and strong productivity gains.

en [( TIME.com ) -- Great news! Unemployment is up. Wages are stagnant. Hiring by U.S. companies is down for the first time in more than four years. But there might be some help wanted on Wall Street soon, because Friday's unemployment report is the stuff rallies are made of. Just a half hour into the trading day, the Dow was up 175 and the NASDAQ almost 200 (with inflation-fearing bonds whooping it up right alongside them) as investors saw visions of the long season of economic overdrive, interest-rate hikes and neurotic markets drawing to a close.] This is the latest sign that the economy is slowing down, and because these are labor numbers, they're going to have particular weight with the Fed, ... This is the kind of news that could take some of the uncertainty out of the markets and get stocks going up again.

en The threat of a Fed policy firming on Nov. 16 will continue to weigh on the markets, despite the weak payroll figures reported in this morning's employment report. The sharp advance (in wage growth) will, nevertheless, worry Fed policy makers who are already concerned about the tightness in the labor market.

en No doubt bears will highlight the rise in continuing claims, up another 29,000, but we are unmoved: A rising ratio of continuing to initial claims signals accelerating productivity growth, not a shaky recovery, ... Labor market conditions are improving -- but we still expect a soft payroll report Friday.


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