Imperial Valley Press

Wall Street ends mixed following strong data on wages, jobs

- BY STAN CHOE AND ALEX VEIGA

Worries about inflation weighed on Wall Street Friday, leaving major indexes mixed after a report showed wages for U.S. workers are accelerati­ng, which is good news for them but could feed into even higher inflation for the nation.

The S&P 500 ended 0.1% lower after having been down as much as 1.2% earlier in the day. The Nasdaq composite also trimmed its deficit, falling 0.2%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average eked out a 0.1% gain. The indexes all notched gains for the week.

Stocks had been on the upswing for the last month on hopes the worst of the nation’s high inflation may have passed already. That fed expectatio­ns for the Federal Reserve to dial down the intensity of its big interest-rate hikes. Such hikes aim to undercut inflation by slowing the economy and dragging down prices for stocks and other investment­s.

But Friday’s labor market report showed that wages for workers rose 5.1% last month from a year earlier. That’s an accelerati­on from October’s 4.9% gain and easily topped economists’ expectatio­ns for a slowdown.

Such jumps in pay are helpful to workers struggling to keep up with soaring prices for everyday necessitie­s. The Federal Reserve’s worry is that too- strong gains could cause inflation to become further entrenched in the economy. That’s because wages make up a big part of costs for companies in services industries, and they could end up raising their own prices further to cover higher wages for their employees.

“Inflation is certainly moving in the right direction,” said Adam Abbas, co-head of fixed income at Harris Associates, “but the market is still going to have to go through some calibratio­n of the risk that we level off at 3% to 4% core inflation versus a natural, steady move down to” the 2% goal set by the Fed.

“After such a strong move over the last three and a half weeks,” Abbas said about expectatio­ns for an easing up by the Fed, “maybe the market has gotten a little ahead of itself.”

Across the economy, employers added 263,000 jobs last month. That beat economists’ forecasts for 200,000, while the unemployme­nt rate held steady at 3.7%. Many Americans also continue to stay entirely out of the job market, with a larger percentage of people either not working or looking for work than before the pandemic, which could increase the pressure on employers to raise wages.

A labor market that remains much stronger than expected could make an already dicey situation for the Fed even more complicate­d. It’s trying to slow the economy just enough to prevent the buying activity that gives inflation its oxygen, without going so far as to create a recession. The Fed has signaled it will likely push the unemployme­nt rate to at least 4.4% in its fight against inflation.

“The most important number for the Fed is probably the wage number,” said Brian Jacobsen, senior investment strategist at Allspring Global Investment­s.

Many traders are still betting on the Fed to downshift the size of its rate hikes at its next meeting later this month, as several officials at the central bank have hinted. Traders still largely expect the Fed to raise its key overnight interest rate on Dec. 14 by half a percentage point, after hiking by a heftier three-quarters of a point four straight times.

But expectatio­ns are rising for what the Fed will do in 2023. Treasury yields jumped immediatel­y after the jobs report’s release on speculatio­n the Fed may ultimately hike rates higher than thought a few moments before.

The yield on the two-year Treasury rose to 4.29% from 4.24% late Thursday. The 10-year yield, which helps set rates for mortgages and many other loans, fell to 3.49% from 3.51%.

 ?? AP PHOTO/SETH WENIG ?? Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York, on Nov. 28.
AP PHOTO/SETH WENIG Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York, on Nov. 28.

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