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ADP Jobs Report Prompts Lowering of Job Growth Estimates

Jun 30, 2010
This article is part of a series called News & Trends.

The ADP tea leaves are being read today as a warning that the June jobs report, due Friday, isn’t going to be rosy.

No one expects that it will come anywhere close to the 431,000 jobs that were added to the U.S. economy in May. That growth was fueled almost entirely by the hiring of temporary census workers. Remove them from the count and May saw about 20,000 new, private sector jobs.

In fact, the estimates are that the economy will have lost jobs during the month as some of those temporary government workers were laid off. Because the Census Bureau employment is skewing the numbers, the focus since April has been purely on the number of private sector jobs created.

Initial estimates were that the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics would report somewhere between 115,000 and 150,000 new, private sector jobs in June.

However, economists were also expecting that the ADP numbers (produced from ADP’s payroll reports) would show June added about 60,000 private sector jobs. In May, ADP said 57,000 jobs were added.

So the 13,000 new June jobs reported in this morning’s release were a surprise. It caused a blip in stock prices and a rise in 30-year Treasury notes as investors sought safe havens. It also prompted analysts to rethink their expectations of Friday’s monthly employment report.

According to Marketwatch, Merrill Lynch cut its estimate from 150,000 new private sector jobs to 125,000. Credit Suisse went from 115,000 to 75,000 new jobs.

The lowering expectations matched the public sentiment as measured by The Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index., which was also released this morning.  An aggregate of responses from a survey of 5,000 households, the Index dropped 9.8 points between May and June. It was the first decline since February.

“Increasing uncertainty and apprehension about the future state of the economy and labor market, no doubt a result of the recent slowdown in job growth, are the primary reasons for the sharp reversal in confidence,” says Lynn Franco, director of The Conference Board Consumer Research Center. “Until the pace of job growth picks up, consumer confidence is not likely to pick up.”

In that area, The Conference Board said the number of online job openings being advertised improved in June. The Help Wanted On-Line Data Series reported 4,154,128 job openings were online in June, an increase of 19,600 from May.

This article is part of a series called News & Trends.
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