- The ADP survey is expected to show the US private sector added 150K new jobs in February.
- Upbeat jobs data in January caused investors to price in a delay in the Fed policy pivot.
- Wage inflation figures will be watched closely by market participants.
The Automatic Data Processing (ADP) Research Institute will release the private employment data for February on Wednesday. The survey is an independent estimate of private-sector employment and pay, usually released two days ahead of the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ (BLS) official jobs report, which features Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) data.
The correlation between the ADP Employment Change and NFP numbers is not always the most reliable and its results tend to diverge from the official job creation numbers provided by the BLS. Still, market participants pay attention to the ADP figures as part of the multiple employment-related releases that take place in the days preceding the NFP publication.
In January, the ADP reported that employment in the private sector rose by 107,000, missing the market expectation of 145,000, and annual pay was up 5.2% year-over-year. In the same period, NFP increased by 353,000 to surpass analysts’ estimate of 180,000 by a wide margin.
After leaving the policy settings unchanged in January, Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Jerome Powell said in the post-meeting press conference that it was not likely for them to start reducing the policy rate as early as March. "If we saw an unexpected weakening in the labor market, that would make us cut rates sooner," Powell added. Impressive labor market data for January reaffirmed a delay in the Fed’s policy pivot and helped the US Dollar stay resilient against its rivals in early February.
免責事項:本記事で述べられている見解は著者の見解のみであり、Followmeの公式見解を反映するものではありません。Followmeは、提供された情報の正確性、完全性、信頼性について一切責任を負いません。また、書面で明示的に記載されている場合を除き、本記事の内容に基づいて行われたいかなる行動についても責任を負いません。

古いコメントはありません。ソファをつかむ最初のものになりましょう。