The Borneo Post

US labour market tightening, inflation trending higher

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WASHINGTON: The number of Americans filing for unemployme­nt aid unexpected­ly fell last week and consumer sentiment rose early this month amid continued optimism over household finances, suggesting a sharp slowdown in job growth in March was an aberration.

While other data on Thursday showed producer prices falling in March for the first time in seven months, prices recorded their biggest year-on-year increase in five years.

The reports pointed to a steadily firming economy and could encourage the Federal Reserve to increase interest rates again in June.

“These reports are generally consistent with the Fed’s narrative that the economy is close to full employment and some inflationa­ry pressures are building,” said Ryan Sweet, senior economist at Moody’s Analytics in West Chester, Pennsylvan­ia.

Initial claims for state unemployme­nt benefits slipped 1,000 to a seasonally adjusted 234,000 for the week ended April 8, the Labor Department said.

That was the third straight weekly decline in claims and left them near a 44-year low of 227,000 hit in February.

Claims have now been below 300,000, a threshold associated with a healthy labour market, for 110 straight weeks.

That is the longest such stretch since 1970, when the labour market was smaller.

The labour market is close to full employment, with the unemployme­nt rate at a near 10-year low of 4.5 per cent.

Economists had forecast firsttime applicatio­ns for jobless benefits rising to 245,000 last week.

The low level of claims suggests that a sharp slowdown in job growth in March was a blip and the labour market is tightening.

Nonfarm payrolls increased by 98,000 jobs last month, the fewest since last May.

“Temporaril­y higher midMarch readings probably in large part reflected weather drags that were apparent in the March employment report, and much stronger results in the first half of April are pointing to a reaccelera­tion in payrolls in April,” said Ted Wieseman, an economist at Morgan Stanley in New York.

A separate survey from the University of Michigan showed its consumer sentiment index rising to a reading of 98.0 early this month from 96.9 in March.

The survey’s current economic conditions index jumped to its highest level since 2000, with an increase in the share of households reporting an improvemen­t in their finances.

Strong consumer sentiment could suggest an accelerati­on in consumer spending in the second quarter after an apparent slowdown at the start of the year.

A surge in confidence in late 2016 and early this year failed to translate into stronger spending.

The dollar fell against a basket of currencies as investors assessed comments by President Donald Trump to the Wall Street Journal late on Wednesday that the dollar was “getting too strong” and that he liked a “lowinteres­t rate policy.”

US Treasury yields briefly fell to a five-month low, while stocks on Wall Street were little changed. — Reuters

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