INSTANT VIEW: U.S. payrolls fall, but less than expected

Fri May 2, 2008 8:59am EDT
 
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NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. employers cut jobs for a fourth straight month in April, though not as vigorously as feared, according to a government report on Friday that also showed an unexpected improvement in the unemployment rate last month.

KEY POINTS: * The Labor Department said 20,000 jobs were shed last month, far fewer than the 80,000 that economists surveyed by Reuters had anticipated would be lost. That followed upwardly revised losses of 81,000 jobs in March and 83,000 in February. Employers also cut 76,000 jobs in January. * The unemployment rate eased to 5 percent in April from 5.1 percent, contrary to forecasts that it would pick up to 5.2 percent.

COMMENTS:

JOHN SILVIA, CHIEF ECONOMIST, WACHOVIA, CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA:

"I think the employment decline was less than expected and consistent with a modest slowdown in the U.S. economy, possibly a recession, and I think it will allow the Fed time to look at the data going forward.

"It allows the fed time to look at the data, observe the flow of the economy, and probably not lower interest rates at the June meeting

IAN SHEPHERDSON, CHIEF U.S. ECONOMIST, HIGH FREQUENCY ECONOMICS, VALHALLA, NEW YORK:

"The net payroll revision was just -8K. This is a blip against a deteriorating trend, though don't expect the bulls on the Street to see it that way. All the payroll improvement was in the service-providing sector, where business services rose 39K, compared to the prior three-month average of minus 34K. This is noise, perhaps due to Easter seasonal problems; the seasonal factor was 81K bigger than in April 07. Note that construction (-61K) and manufacturing (-46K) were together a bit worse than March. Elsewhere, hours down a hefty 0.4%, overtime hours down too. Expect much weaker headlines in May."

KIM RUPERT, MANAGING DIRECTOR, GLOBAL FIXED INCOME ANALYSIS, ACTION ECONOMICS LLC, SAN FRANCISCO:  Continued...

 

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