The unemployment rate fell to 9.5% from 9.7%, but this likely reflects people dropping out of the labor market. The work feel well 0.1%, which is the equivalent of about 300k job loss. The private sector 83k jobs and the May data were revised to show only 33k from 41k. Hourly earnings fell 0.1%. Bottom line then is few manhours of work, fewer jobs and less income.
The data is not strong enough to ease anxiety about the US economy and the losing momentum. The dollar will likely stay under pressure. The Canadian dollar and Mexican peso are also vulnerable to poor US data.
Jobs Data To Keep Pressure on the Dollar
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
July 02, 2010
Rating: