December 7th, 2024 | Job openings, labor markets, Holiday spending, 24 hours Trading, Tax Problems with Overconcentrated Portfolios, Intel Corporation (INTC), Target Corporation (TGT), The Gap, Inc...

December 7th, 2024 | Job openings, labor markets, Holiday spending, 24 hours Trading, Tax Problems with Overconcentrated Portfolios, Intel Corporation (INTC), Target Corporation (TGT), The Gap, Inc...

Released Saturday, 7th December 2024
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December 7th, 2024 | Job openings, labor markets, Holiday spending, 24 hours Trading, Tax Problems with Overconcentrated Portfolios, Intel Corporation (INTC), Target Corporation (TGT), The Gap, Inc...

December 7th, 2024 | Job openings, labor markets, Holiday spending, 24 hours Trading, Tax Problems with Overconcentrated Portfolios, Intel Corporation (INTC), Target Corporation (TGT), The Gap, Inc...

December 7th, 2024 | Job openings, labor markets, Holiday spending, 24 hours Trading, Tax Problems with Overconcentrated Portfolios, Intel Corporation (INTC), Target Corporation (TGT), The Gap, Inc...

December 7th, 2024 | Job openings, labor markets, Holiday spending, 24 hours Trading, Tax Problems with Overconcentrated Portfolios, Intel Corporation (INTC), Target Corporation (TGT), The Gap, Inc...

Saturday, 7th December 2024
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Job openings remain strong, what does that mean for our economy?The Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, also known as the JOLTs Report, showed job openings of 7.74 million in the month of October topped expectations of 7.5 million and increased from September’s reading of 7.4 million. While it was nice to see the increase, I wouldn’t be surprised to see job openings decline further from here. Openings peaked in March 2022 at over 12 million and have been on the decline since then. While that may sound problematic, these numbers were greatly distorted by the Covid shutdown and then the reopening that followed. We had never seen more than 8 million job openings pre Covid and at the peak there were more than two job openings for every available worker. We still have a very healthy labor market considering there are still 1.1 available positions for every unemployed worker. I would actually say the labor market is in an even healthier place at this point in time. With the excessive amount of openings, we saw a lot of employee turnover and quits which I believe led to elevated wage inflation. The labor market is much more balanced at this point in time, which should lead to less concerns over wage inflation. This should then be positive for the overall inflation rate which the Fed has been battling the last couple of years now.The labor market continues to produce strong results!November payrolls showed a very nice increase of 227,000, which topped the estimate of 214,000. The two prior months also saw positive revisions with October now showing gains of 36,000 versus 12,000 and September showing an impressive growth of 255,000 versus 223,000. While the November gain may look quite strong, it’s important to put this in perspective and pair it with the weak October report. October was challenged as it was held back by impacts from Hurricane Milton and the Boeing strike. This essentially reduced the jobs in the October report and added them to the November report. If we instead look at an average of October and November, we would then see growth of 131,500, which is still strong but not nearly as impressive as the November headline number. Areas of strength in the report included health care and social assistance which was up 72,300, leisure and hospitality which was up 53,000, and government which was up 33,000. While the government number includes state, local, and federal, I am curious to see what these numbers look like next year with Elon Musk and DOGE taking a closer look at government spending. Instead of consistent gains from this sector, we could potentially see a decline in payrolls. Utilities which saw a decline of 100 and retail trade which saw a decline of 28,000 were the only areas that produced a negative result in the month. I was surprised to see retail trade on the list considering the busy holiday season, but it is believed the later Thanksgiving holiday had a big impact. With the report largely in line, expectations for a Fed rate cut jumped to nearly 90% when they meet on December 17th and 18th. At this point, I would be very surprised if they didn’t do a quarter point cut at that meeting. I do believe after that cut though, there could be a pause until we see further data.Holiday spending is looking positiveWe have now been seeing predictions for what spending will look like for the holiday season. It’s no surprise to me those numbers are looking pretty good with estimates for spending to increase somewhere between 3.8 and 4%. These estimates should be confirmed or may even be a little light with the success of the post-Thanksgiving deals. Data from Mastercard showed Black Friday retail sales, excluding automotive, increased 3.4% compared to last year. This came with a huge increase of 14.69% for online shopping compared to an increase of just 0.7% for in-store sales. According to Adobe Analytics, Cyber Monday then set a record with $13.3 billion of sales. This was an increase of 7.3% co

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