Working Wonders

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What's going on?

Data out on Friday showed that the US added more jobs than expected again last month.

What does this mean?

The US economys grappling with regional bank woes and a good old-fashioned slump right now but the jobs market appears to have missed the memo. A whole 253,000 jobs were added last month, leaving the modest prediction of 180,000 in the dust. And sure, some businesses hit the brakes on hiring or showed workers the door, but others were still trying to fill empty office chairs with sweet, sky-high salaries. Thats probably why average hourly wages outpaced Aprils expectations clocking in at 0.5% monthly and 4.4% annually.

Why should I care?

The bigger picture: Chin up.
This may not be the news the Federal Reserve (the Fed) hoped for, especially days after hinting at a pause in interest rate hikes. But lets look at the bigger picture: data suggests that estimates for previous months were somewhat overblown, meaning the Feds efforts might just be cooling the red-hot market slowly but surely. Plus, tighter lending conditions will take time to make themselves felt and the central bank holding rates at their highest since 2007 is almost destined to leave its mark too. So, while some say the Fed might have to step in again, theres still a solid chance it can just stay the course.

Zooming out: Matter of life and debt.
The US has a short-term issue on its mind too. See, the nation routinely spends beyond its means, and it issues bonds to make up some of that shortfall. But the spendthrift governments already hit its borrowing limit and thats got it scrambling to raise the so-called debt ceiling. If politicians cant pull that off, Uncle Sam could wind up cash-strapped, jeopardizing millions of jobs and grinding welfare payments and infrastructure projects to a halt, and putting a dent in financial markets too.

Originally posted as part of the Finimize daily email.

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