UPDATE 2-US private firms shed jobs in June, more to come

Wed Jul 1, 2009 9:51am EDT
 
[-] Text [+]

* US private sector loses 473,000 jobs in June, ADP says

* Loss bigger than expected but smallest since Oct. 2008

* Up to one million more private job losses seen in 2009 (Adds market reaction, quote, background, byline)

By Burton Frierson

NEW YORK, July 1 (Reuters) - U.S. private sector job cuts fell in June to their lowest in eight months, but they still came in more than expected and the economy may be on track to lose another one million workers by year-end.

Private employers cut 473,000 jobs in June, down from 485,000 in May, according to a report by ADP Employer Services published on Wednesday. Economists surveyed by Reuters had expected 393,000 private-sector job cuts in June.

Though June's loss was the smallest ADP had reported since October 2008, the surprisingly large number of cuts dealt a setback to those expecting the U.S. economy to recover soon.

"The data surprises me a little bit in that the consensus out there seems to be that business is improving and that the economy has hit bottom," said Mark Bonhard, investment advisor at Dawson Wealth Management in Cleveland, Ohio.

"This definitely is not good news."

After the report, U.S. stock index futures pared their gains, though Wall Street eventually opened higher. U.S. Treasury debt prices initially recovered some ground but were then hit by renewed selling. The U.S. dollar pared its losses versus the euro.

The May figure was revised from an originally reported loss of 532,000 jobs.

WAITING FOR GROWTH

Though many analysts expect the U.S. economy to resume growth in the second half of the year following the worst recession in decades, they note that employment gains usually lag the initial rebound in gross domestic product.

Joel Prakken, chairman of Macroeconomic Advisers, whose firm jointly developed the ADP Employer Services report, told a teleconference of journalists growth is likely to be modest at about 2 to 2.5 percent in the second half of the year.

"Between now and then I would expect additional job losses that are pushing up towards another million or so, maybe 800,000, 850,000, with the unemployment rate continuing to move up unevenly," Prakken said.

"I would say (unemployment would be) pressing up between 9.75 and 10 percent in the second half of the year."  Continued...

 
Actors Vincent Curatola (L), Steven Van Zandt (C) and Tony Sirico from "The Sopranos" arrive at the 14th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards in Los Angeles January 27, 2008. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
Wall St meets "The Sopranos"

Details of an alleged insider trading ring read like the script of a mobster drama, full of coded nicknames, disposable cell phones and paranoia about informants. But in the end, all of the precautions were for naught.  Full Article 

More News

Wall St gains on recovery hopes, but job data looms
Wednesday, 1 Jul 2009 05:33pm EDT 
Jobs data signals hurdles amid factory glimmer
Wednesday, 1 Jul 2009 05:08pm EDT 
Dollar drops against euro after China news
Wednesday, 1 Jul 2009 01:33pm EDT 

Featured Broker sponsored link

REUTERS/Chip East
Insider sales not a sell signal this time

Corporate bosses are likely to sell more of their companies' stock through the end of the year, but that does not mean stock prices have reached a peak.  Full Article