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The US economy added just 12,000 new positions in October, in by far the weakest jobs report of the Biden administration, as the closely watched number was hit hard by hurricanes and the Boeing strike.
The figure, published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics just days before the US election, was far below the average forecast of 100,000 job gains in a poll of economists by Bloomberg.
It also fell far short of September’s downwardly revised figure of 223,000 new jobs.
US government bond yields dropped immediately after the release of the October jobs report, reflecting falling interest rate expectations.
The policy-sensitive two-year Treasury yield, which moves inversely to prices, fell 0.07 percentage points to 4.1 per cent after the payroll figure was published, reversing its previous direction.
Stock futures extended their gains, with contracts tracking Wall Street’s S&P 500 trading 0.5 per cent higher and those tracking the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 also up 0.5 per cent.
The jobs report was the last big US economic data release before Tuesday’s presidential election. The economy is a central theme in the contest as vice-president Kamala Harris, the Democratic contender, struggles to overcome voters’ discontent about the cost of living.
The Biden administration has argued that it has brought down inflation as well as overseen a booming recovery in the labour market.
Harris is less trusted on the economy than her Republican rival Donald Trump, according to the final monthly poll for the Financial Times and the University of Michigan Ross School of Business.
Friday’s jobs data was gathered during the week that Hurricane Milton made landfall in Florida and shortly after Hurricane Helene slammed the south-east of the US.
A continuing strike at Boeing, in which 33,000 employees have stopped working, also dragged the figure down.
The jobs report comes the week before the Federal Reserve’s next interest rate decision on November 7. The US central bank is expected to lower rates by a quarter point, following a larger-than-usual half-point cut in September.
As inflation has slowed in recent months, the Fed has become increasingly focused on protecting the labour market.
In an effort to achieve a “soft landing”, in which inflation returns to the Fed’s 2 per cent target without triggering a recession, officials are trying to lower rates to a “neutral” level that does not hamper growth.
Policymakers and economists appear increasingly optimistic about such an outcome, and have signalled they expect the downward distortion of October’s payrolls figure to fade away with the impact of the strike and the hurricanes over time.
This is a developing story
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