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December US Jobs Report to Cap Year of Moderate Hiring

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December US Jobs Report to Cap Year of Moderate Hiring

(Bloomberg) — US employers probably tempered their hiring last month to wrap up a year of moderating yet still-healthy job growth that economists expect to carry on in 2025.

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Payrolls increased 160,000 in December, when the labor market moved beyond distortions caused by hurricanes and strike activity in previous months, according to the median projection of economists surveyed by Bloomberg. That would put average monthly job growth near 180,000 for 2024 — lower than the prior three years but consistent with a firm labor market.

The monthly jobs data on Friday are unlikely to alter the view of Federal Reserve officials that they can slow the pace of interest-rate cuts amid a durable economy and inflation that’s dissipating only gradually. Investors on Wednesday will parse minutes of the Fed’s December meeting for additional insight on how torn policymakers were on the quarter-point reduction in rates. At the time, Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack was the lone dissenter.

Meanwhile, the unemployment rate is forecast to hold steady at 4.2% and average hourly earnings growth is seen cooling a touch from a month earlier — consistent with a labor market that’s no longer a source of inflation.

A separate Labor Department report on Tuesday is forecast to show little change in November job openings from the prior month. The number of vacancies is about 1 million higher than it was at the end of 2019, while the ratio of openings per unemployed person is in line with its pre-pandemic level.

What Bloomberg Economics Says:

“The consensus on Wall Street is that US economic exceptionalism will continue in 2025. Nonfarm payrolls will add fuel to such talk. We expect December’s headline print to be a blowout, with most sectors showing improved hiring. Some of that may be a continued reversal from October’s weak, hurricane-affected print — something that won’t last. We also expect job openings to stabilize, and jobless claims to remain low.”

—Anna Wong, Stuart Paul, Eliza Winger, Estelle Ou & Chris G. Collins, economists. For full analysis, click here

A number of US central bankers will appear at public speaking events in the coming week, including Fed governors Lisa Cook on Monday and Christopher Waller on Wednesday.

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