The longshoreman’s union conceded
And ports will now work unimpeded
But is that enough
To make sure that stuff
Gets everywhere that it is needed?
Arguably, one of the biggest stories this morning is that the fears over the longshoreman’s union strike dramatically weakening the US economy while pushing up inflation have passed as there has been a temporary agreement to raise workers’ pay by 62% over the next six years although it seems that the questions over automation remain. However, the agreement will last until January 15th, so the 3-day work stoppage is unlikely to have a major impact on the US economy, although I’m sure there will be a few hiccups around. But hey, at least one problem is off the docket.
Meanwhile, problems in the Mideast
Continuously have increased
Iran took their shot
And all that it wrought
Was fear they’ve awakened the beast
Which takes us to the next major story, the nature of Israel’s response to Iran’s missile attack from earlier this week. From what I have read, the US is trying very hard to persuade PM Netanyahu to leave Iran’s nuclear facilities and oil production capabilities alone. While I understand the latter, given an attack there would likely drive oil prices far higher and not help VP Harris’s election prospects, I cannot understand why the US would be so adamant that Israel not seek to destroy Iran’s nuclear capabilities. At any rate, the headline in this morning’s WSJ, “Biden Sidelined as Israel Reshapes Middle East”, seems to say it all. At this point, we can only watch and wait.
However, consider the benefits of either of those targets. As it remains unclear whether Iran has achieved the capability to create nuclear weapons, an attack on those facilities, which are hardened and underground, may or may not be effective at preventing a future nuclear Iran. But an attack on the oil production facilities, which are wide open and not nearly as well-defended, would immediately limit Iran’s income despite the certain rise in oil prices, as they would not be able to sell any. Starving Iran of capital to continue to run its military and fund its proxies would likely be extremely effective at dramatically reducing threats to Israel. As well, I’m pretty confident the Saudis would not be unhappy if oil rose to $90 or $100 per barrel. My point is the latter strategy is likely to be effective at reducing Iranian activities while being quite achievable. We shall see.
And finally, early today
The payrolls report will hold sway
O’er markets worldwide
As traders decide
If more cuts are soon on their way
Which takes us to the big economic story today, the monthly payroll report. Wednesday’s ADP Employment data was much better than expected, showing job growth of 143K. Current expectations are as follows:
| Nonfarm Payrolls | 140K |
| Private Payrolls | 125K |
| Manufacturing Payrolls | -5K |
| Unemployment Rate | 4.2% |
| Average Hourly Earnings | 0.3% (3.8% Y/Y) |
| Average Weekly Hours | 34.3 |
| Participation Rate | 62.9% |
Source: tradingeconomics.com
One thing to keep in mind is this is going to be the last meaningful payroll report before the next FOMC meeting because the October report, scheduled to be released on November 1st, is going to be a complete wreck with virtually no information because of the impact of Hurricane Helene. In fact, it will likely take several months before economic data gets back to whatever its underlying trend may be given the disruption over such a wide swath of the nation.
The question of the economy’s strength continues to be a hotly contested disagreement between those who believe that a recession is coming soon, or has already started, vs. those who believe that there is no recession coming in the near future. The first group tends to look through the headline data and sees decreasing quit rates and reduced hiring offsetting reduced firing with the lack of hiring seen as an indication business activity is slowing. They look at high household credit card debt and growing delinquencies and see analogies to past recessions. Meanwhile, the bulls look at the headline data and say, GDP continues to grow, inflation continues to slide and while manufacturing has been weak for nearly two years, this is a services economy and that has been strong (yesterday’s ISM Services print was a much stronger than expected 54.9).
Now, the very fact that Powell cut rates two weeks ago is indicative of the fact that there is real concern at the FOMC that growth is slowing. I will not discuss the political question here. But data like TSA travel clearances and restaurant seatings and the crowds at events show that at least some portion of the economy is still doing well. Yesterday’s Claims data was 225K, a few thousand more than expected but still nowhere near a level that would indicate there is an employment glut.
I believe the idea of the K-shaped recovery is the best description of things around. The top quartile of income earners is doing just fine while the rest of the economy is struggling. But that top quartile represents an outsized amount of economic activity, so the data continues to be positive. In fact, if you are looking for a reason that there is so much angst in the electorate, this is it. With all that in mind, though, my take is this morning’s number is going to be better than expected, somewhere on the 175K – 200K level.
Ok, let’s quickly run through market activity overnight. Yesterday’s modest decline in US markets did not really give much direction to the overnight session as the Nikkei (+0.2%) managed to continue its recent modest rally and the Hang Seng (+2.8%) continues to benefit from a belief that Chinese stimulus is coming to the rescue. But the rest of Asia couldn’t make up its mind (China is still closed) with gainers (Korea, New Zealand, Singapore) and laggards (India, Australia , Taiwan). In Europe, the picture is also mixed ahead of the US data with modest gainers (CAC, DAX) and laggards (FTSE 100, IBEX) as the US data is still the key driver. One story here is that the EU decided to impose tariffs of as much as 45% on Chinese BEV’s, something that is likely to become problematic for European exporters going forward. As to US futures, just ahead of the data (8:00) markets are edging higher by 0.2%.
In the bond market, yields are continuing to rise around the world with Treasuries higher by 2bps this morning after a 5bp climb yesterday afternoon. European sovereign yields are also much firmer, between 3bps and 6bps across the continent as concerns over inflation reignite. Both the price of oil and the Chinese tariff story are driving this bond move. As to JGB’s, they jumped 6bps last night, but that was more on the back of the US rise than any domestic news.
Oil (+1.4%) is continuing to rally as fears over an Israeli attack on Iranian assets builds. This has helped the entire commodities complex with metals markets also firmer this morning, albeit only on the order of +0.25%. Nonetheless, the commodity higher story remains a fundamental one in my world view, especially as food prices are picking back up again around the world. The UN’s FAO Food price index rose to its highest level in more than a year and looks for all the world like it has based and is now going to trend higher again.
Finally, the dollar is mixed this morning, with no defining theme here. The pound (+0.35%) and MXN (+0.4%) have rallied while KRW (-0.5%) and AUD (-0.25%) have declined with the euro virtually unchanged. My point is there is nothing specific to explain the movement.
And that’s really it. We hear from a couple of more Fed speakers but since Powell on Monday cooled the idea of another quick 50bp cut, they have not given us much new guidance. If I am correct and the data is strong, I expect bonds to suffer along with commodities while the dollar should gain. Stocks are a little less clear. However, if it is a soft number, you can be sure that the 50bp talk will dramatically increase and stocks and commodities will soar as the dollar slides.
Good luck and good weekend
Adf