Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Outlook

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - The U.S. job market isn’t giving up easily, meaning its ‘shadow’ — the oil market — won’t either. With neither slowing down significantly, good luck to the Fed in bringing down inflation meaningfully.

As the first Friday of the month allowed us a glimpse into how employment performed in the previous month, the May report from the Labor Department left the Federal Reserve feeling happy and queasy at the same time — a mixed emotion all too familiar of late with policy-makers at the central bank.

Employers added 390,000 jobs while the jobless rate remained steady at 3.6% for a third month in a row, according to the data that should embolden the Fed in carrying out more rate hikes to tame inflation running at 40-year highs.

On the surface, May’s gain in employment was the weakest since April 2021 and a further slide could come in months ahead. Yet, despite talk of hiring freezes, there are still nearly two job openings for every unemployed person — meaning outright job losses are unlikely near-term.

Thus, the mixed feeling.

“The Fed … will welcome the steadier jobless rate, firmer participation rate, and possible softening in wages, while worrying that the economy is still running too hot to convincingly drive inflation back to the target,” said Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets.

The central bank is in its most aggressive price-fighting mode since the 1980s, when the legendary Paul Volcker was its chair.

What’s happening now is chillingly similar to then — a stock market in the dumps and oil prices off the charts.

What’s not the same is the job market. Unemployment then trended up from an annual average low of 3.5% in 1969 to 9.7% in 1982.

The current jobless pace of 3.6% — which falls below the Fed’s 4% marker for “maximum employment” — was arrived at after unemployment among Americans reached a record high of 14.8% in April 2020, with the loss of some 20 million positions in the aftermath of the coronavirus outbreak that year.

Since April 2021, wages of Americans have risen by a compounded 6.1%, averaging a monthly growth of 0.4% as hourly wages expanded every month except March, when they were flat. The Fed says this and the trillions of dollars disbursed by the government as aid during the pandemic are principally responsible for today’s inflation.

Economists worry that in its bid to fight inflation, the Fed will tip the United States into a recession. The economy has been on a weaker trajectory since the start of this year, experiencing a negative growth of 1.4% in the first quarter. If it does not return to positive territory by the second quarter, the economy will technically be in recession given that it takes just two straight negative quarters to account for a recession.