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Friday's jobs report will show declines as the Census lays off workers, but Morningstar's Bob Johnson and Vishnu Lekraj think the underlying trend will be stable.
Transcript
Considering the Effects of the US Jobs Report
Jeremy Glaser: For Morningstar.com, I am Jeremy Glaser. After May's
disappointing jobs report, investors are anxiously waiting to see
what June's unemployment picture looks like. I am here today with
Associate Director of Economic Analysis, Bob Johnson and
Employment Analyst, Vishnu Lekraj, to preview tomorrow’s
report. Gentlemen, thanks for joining me.
Vishnu Lekraj: Thanks, Jeremy.
Bob Johnson: Good to be here.
Jeremy Glaser: The consensus right now is that we're going to lose jobs next
month. What's behind the headline number? Do you agree with
that consensus? Do you think people should be worried about a
negative unemployment report?
Vishnu Lekraj: The consensus includes a negative or a decrease in census workers,
which June usually is the month where you see the most census
workers let go. Now the census workers are going to be a drag for
the whole rest of the year here. When there were positive tailwind
for the first half, they’re going to be a drag over the second half.
So, when you include that, consensus says 100,000 is going to be
the loss for June. I'm looking at a 145, but that includes 15,000
growth excluding census workers and 45,000 private sector
growth.
Jeremy Glaser: So even though the headline number might look negative, that's
really kind of the noise in the census hiring and firing, and doesn't
have anything to do with the underlying trend.
Vishnu Lekraj: Just like last month, you got to look past that the headline number.
Jeremy Glaser: So, Bob, I know that you look at a lot of regional reports to try to
get a sense of where the big number is going to come from. What
have you been seeing in the trends of this month? And do you
think we're going to see this kind of private sector growth again?
Bob Johnson: Yeah. I think, if you look at the purchasing manager reports, there
is a number of regional ones and then this morning we got the
national one. In most cases, the employment number is still over
50 indicating employment growth in manufacturing. Some of the
survey show continuing improvement in hiring and some show
some deceleration. So it's a little bit mixed, but all of them show
growth.
Jeremy Glaser: But on the flipside, unemployment claims have been very high and
have remained at an elevated level, so we might have new jobs
being created, but also have a ton of people getting fired.
Bob Johnson: Yeah. And I think there is some phenomenon where that happens.
People kind of expect this unemployment layoff situation to, kind
of, go down constantly through a recession, but, kind of, up
through a recovery. But what happens is that you have a lot of
mergers and acquisitions once you start a recovery and that tends
to lead to some layoffs in those industries.
And then I think there is also some business segments where
people say, well, you know the issue has been the poor economy.
We’ve been in a recession and so I guess it's fine. We'll give you
all, your group a chance. And then when you get the recovery and
the business still doesn't get better and then they lay the hammer
down and then you have more layoffs again. So the layoff number,
the outbound side of the employment number is not likely to get a
lot better.
Vishnu Lekraj: Usually, claims range in 300,000 to 350,000 a month in a regular
economy, in a growing economy. Usually, you have those – that
amount of claims going out the door. So, having 475 is not a good
thing or having that number above 400,000 is not necessary a good
thing, but you have to keep that in context. So, usually, you still
see the number above 300,000 during an expansion.
Jeremy Glaser: It's never a number that really goes to zero—
Vishnu Lekraj: Right.
Jeremy Glaser: Like you’d like to see expansion on the job side. One other thing is
that we’ve tracked, we saw, you know, very pronounced last
month was that even though people are getting laid off, those that
do have jobs are actually working more hours and are getting paid
more. Is that something you’d think would continue, Bob?
Bob Johnson: Well, I think the last month we had particular good numbers on the
hours and the wages, and maybe we’re a little bit more tamed this
month. But I am expecting continued improvement in hours
worked, which means that you will work with people you have
longer and the pay getting just a little bit better. And I think those
two things are just as important in this report as the raw numbers
of people employed.
Jeremy Glaser: So even if it’s on the headline, definitely something to dive a little
bit deeper into. Vishnu, you cover the employment services firms.
Have you seen any indications from them about what the hiring
market is like right now?
Vishnu Lekraj: Yeah. Paychecks reported not too long ago and all signs for them
is positive, slight up-tick, but is nothing huge. There is no V for
their recovery. There is pretty much—they said there is no V for
the employment market recovery. Right now, I think what we have
is a stalemate between hirings and firings. The net amount between
those two is pretty much at zero.
So, you're going to see that here for the next few months.
Hopefully that should improve over the course of 2010 into 2011.
Jeremy Glaser: And thinking about the broader unemployment rate, it doesn't
sound like you think there is going to be a big movement?
Bob Johnson: No, I think the number is going to be relatively flat this month. I
think we’re going to add a few jobs and probably a few more
people reenter the workforce and can switch other out. And I think
we'll get probably a relatively flat unemployment rate, that's about
9.7%.
Vishnu Lekraj: Movement in the unemployment rate.
Bob Johnson: Right.
Vishnu Lekraj: Yeah.
Jeremy Glaser: And then when is that finally—what has to happen for that number
to really start to move downwards again?
Bob Johnson: I think you have to have to get everybody back interested that once
looking for a job and adding more jobs. I think we've got the
adding more jobs part down. I think we still got people reentering
the force a little bit. So, it generally takes four to six month once
the employment gets a good momentum behind it to get the
unemployment rate really moving back down again towards the
end of the year.
Jeremy Glaser: Alright, Bob, Vishnu, thanks so much for talking with me today.
And I'll talk to you tomorrow when the actual report comes out.
Vishnu Lekraj: Thank you.
Bob Johnson: Fantastic. Thank you.
Jeremy Glaser: For Morningstar.com, I'm Jeremy Glaser.