US jobs beat estimates to touch 224,000

New York: US hiring rebounded in June and topped all estimates of economists, a sign of labour-market strength that may ease calls for a Federal Reserve interest-rate cut. Stocks fell while Treasury yields and the dollar advanced.

Payrolls climbed 224,000 after a downwardly revised 72,000 advance the prior month, according to a Labor Department report Friday. The jobless rate ticked up to 3.7 per cent from a half-century low of 3.6 per cent while average hourly earnings increased 3.1 per cent from a year earlier, slightly less than projected.

The report may offer President Donald Trump another chance to boast that the world’s largest economy is in the best shape ever. Despite that, he’s made repeated calls for Fed Chairman Jerome Powell to cut interest rates as the record expansion shows other signs of slowing just as the 2020 campaign begins.

The job gains signal the labour market remains firm. Though the economy still faces trade tensions and below-target inflation, signs that economic growth remains intact may challenge calls for the Fed to cut rates this month — especially those for a half-point reduction. Traders trimmed bets on Fed rate cuts after the report.

Revisions subtracted 11,000 jobs for the prior two months, though the three-month average rose to 171,000, the highest since March.

The job gains were broad-based across industries and included rebounds in manufacturing, which added 17,000 jobs, the most since January, and construction payrolls rising by 21,000. The weakness in retail persisted with a fifth straight drop in employment.

Average hourly earnings rose 0.2 per cent from the prior month, missing estimates, following an upwardly revised 0.3 per cent gain, while annual wage gains held at 3.1 per cent.

The participation rate, or share of working-age people in the labour force, increased to 62.9 per cent following 62.8 per cent as steady wage gains pulled more Americans from the sidelines and into the workforce. The average workweek was unchanged at 34.4 hours.

— Bloomberg