NEW YORK: Stock investors will anxiously await the crucial June jobs data this week for clues on how the US economy may weather recent storms that drove Wall Street's major indexes down for the year.
Last Friday's jobs report will wrap up a week packed with economic data, including consumer confidence and pending home sales. The week's steady stream of numbers will include some early earnings reports.
Non-farm payrolls are forecast to shed 110,000 jobs in June, according to the US Labour Department's report. Although much of that drop is due to the government laying off half of its temporary Census workers, another weak reading for private-sector hiring will disappoint investors.
"The truth is that without job creation, we're in for a tougher time, and I mean real job creation, not temporary job creation, not part-time job creation ' real job creation," said Kenneth Polcari, a floor trader at the New York Stock Exchange with Icap Corporates.
The US unemployment rate is forecast to rise to 9.8% in June from May's rate of 9.7%, according to economists polled by Reuters.
That is not far below the peak US jobless rate of 10.2% hit last October ' a year after Wall Street's meltdown resulted in one of the worst recessions in decades.
Without solid growth in hiring, the US economy is likely to limp along as most consumers refrain from spending on anything but the bare necessities. Consumer spending accounts for about two-thirds of US economic activity.
June consumer confidence, due on Tuesday, June 29 from the Conference Board, is projected to dip from May's levels.
An index of pending home sales for May will be closely watched after recent housing market reports suggest the sector's recovery could stall with the expiration of a federal tax credit for first-time home buyers that was created to fire up housing demand.
"The reality of it is the recession is not over and whether it's a double dip or a straight line with no growth, that appears to be more the reality than the hype of recovery," said Carl Birkelbach, chairman and chief executive of Birkelbach Investment Securities in Chicago.
At last Friday's close, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 2.94% for the week, while the Standard & Poor's 500 Index was down 3.65%, and the Nasdaq Composite Index was down 3.74%.
For the year, the Dow is down 2.73%, while the S&P 500 is down 3.44% and the Nasdaq is off 2.01%.
After US lawmakers hammered out an historic overhaul of financial regulations in Friday's early morning hours, President Barack Obama urged world leaders to follow his lead on regulatory reform at the Group of 20 (G20) summit in Canada over the weekend.
Banks should be given more time to comply with tougher global capital rules, the Financial Stability Board said on Sunday, in connection with the G20 meeting in Toronto. At their summit, G20 leaders agreed to a longer introduction of the Basel III bank capital and liquidity rules ' saying 2012 should mark the start, instead of the end of implementation.
Wall Street's menu of economic data will be full this week. The precursors to Friday's jobs report are the ADP survey on Wednesday, expected to show private-sector employers added 60,000 jobs in June, and weekly initial jobless claims on Thursday. New claims are expected to fall slightly to 450,000. The forecasts are from economists polled by Reuters.
On Monday, May personal income and spending data are due. Both are seen up a tick.
On Tuesday, the Conference Board's June index of consumer confidence is expected to slip to 63.0 from May's 63.3.
Purchasing managers' indexes (PMIs) for New York and the US Midwest-Chicago area will be watched on Wednesday for signs of strength in the manufacturing sector.
The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) index on US manufacturing activity, due on Thursday, is expected to show that manufacturing continued to expand in June, but at a slightly slower pace than in May. The employment components of the regional PMIs and the ISM's manufacturing index will be eyed carefully ahead of the non-farm payrolls data.
An index of pending home sales, set for release on Thursday, is likely to provide more evidence of a slowdown in housing. The forecast calls for the index to drop 12.5% in May ' a sharp reversal from April's gain of 6%.
"This second half is going to be without stimulus, with housing down, with employment continuing to go down, and the consumer continuing to get whipped," Birkelbach said.
Jume domestic car and truck sales are due on Thursday.
Volatility could rise this week, with fund managers selling their losers and buying winning stocks to adjust their portfolios at the end of the quarter.
Volume usually drops before the long weekend to mark the Independence Day holiday and that could increase volatility.
"If you don't have a lot of volume at the end of the week, you could always have big moves off of low volume," said Tim Holland, co-portfolio manager of Aston/TAMRO Diversified Equity Fund in Alexandria, Virginia. "You could have a smaller number of participants move things."
That could make for some tense moments with traders focused on market technicals after the S&P 500 failed to hold above its 200-day moving average during the week. Some investors see a move below that level as a bearish signal.
Michael Sheldon, chief market strategist at RDM Financial Group in Westport, Connecticut, said the market would likely be range bound in the weeks ahead.
"It looks like we're stuck in this trading range, with the downside around 1,040 to 1,050 and upside capped by the 50-day moving average, which right now is around 1,127," he said.
S&P 500 companies' earnings are expected to grow 26.8% in the second quarter, according to Thomson Reuters research.
This week will see some early earnings reports from S&P 500 corporations, including Micron Tech, General Mills, Apollo Group and Monsanto Co.
Positive results from Oracle late last Thursday buoyed stocks the next day as the market struggled for direction after Friday's mixed economic data.
Earnings season will start in earnest after Alcoa Inc, one of the 30 stocks that make up the Dow, reports results on July 12. ' Reuters
Last Friday's jobs report will wrap up a week packed with economic data, including consumer confidence and pending home sales. The week's steady stream of numbers will include some early earnings reports.
Non-farm payrolls are forecast to shed 110,000 jobs in June, according to the US Labour Department's report. Although much of that drop is due to the government laying off half of its temporary Census workers, another weak reading for private-sector hiring will disappoint investors.
"The truth is that without job creation, we're in for a tougher time, and I mean real job creation, not temporary job creation, not part-time job creation ' real job creation," said Kenneth Polcari, a floor trader at the New York Stock Exchange with Icap Corporates.
The US unemployment rate is forecast to rise to 9.8% in June from May's rate of 9.7%, according to economists polled by Reuters.
That is not far below the peak US jobless rate of 10.2% hit last October ' a year after Wall Street's meltdown resulted in one of the worst recessions in decades.
Without solid growth in hiring, the US economy is likely to limp along as most consumers refrain from spending on anything but the bare necessities. Consumer spending accounts for about two-thirds of US economic activity.
June consumer confidence, due on Tuesday, June 29 from the Conference Board, is projected to dip from May's levels.
An index of pending home sales for May will be closely watched after recent housing market reports suggest the sector's recovery could stall with the expiration of a federal tax credit for first-time home buyers that was created to fire up housing demand.
"The reality of it is the recession is not over and whether it's a double dip or a straight line with no growth, that appears to be more the reality than the hype of recovery," said Carl Birkelbach, chairman and chief executive of Birkelbach Investment Securities in Chicago.
At last Friday's close, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 2.94% for the week, while the Standard & Poor's 500 Index was down 3.65%, and the Nasdaq Composite Index was down 3.74%.
For the year, the Dow is down 2.73%, while the S&P 500 is down 3.44% and the Nasdaq is off 2.01%.
After US lawmakers hammered out an historic overhaul of financial regulations in Friday's early morning hours, President Barack Obama urged world leaders to follow his lead on regulatory reform at the Group of 20 (G20) summit in Canada over the weekend.
Banks should be given more time to comply with tougher global capital rules, the Financial Stability Board said on Sunday, in connection with the G20 meeting in Toronto. At their summit, G20 leaders agreed to a longer introduction of the Basel III bank capital and liquidity rules ' saying 2012 should mark the start, instead of the end of implementation.
Wall Street's menu of economic data will be full this week. The precursors to Friday's jobs report are the ADP survey on Wednesday, expected to show private-sector employers added 60,000 jobs in June, and weekly initial jobless claims on Thursday. New claims are expected to fall slightly to 450,000. The forecasts are from economists polled by Reuters.
On Monday, May personal income and spending data are due. Both are seen up a tick.
On Tuesday, the Conference Board's June index of consumer confidence is expected to slip to 63.0 from May's 63.3.
Purchasing managers' indexes (PMIs) for New York and the US Midwest-Chicago area will be watched on Wednesday for signs of strength in the manufacturing sector.
The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) index on US manufacturing activity, due on Thursday, is expected to show that manufacturing continued to expand in June, but at a slightly slower pace than in May. The employment components of the regional PMIs and the ISM's manufacturing index will be eyed carefully ahead of the non-farm payrolls data.
An index of pending home sales, set for release on Thursday, is likely to provide more evidence of a slowdown in housing. The forecast calls for the index to drop 12.5% in May ' a sharp reversal from April's gain of 6%.
"This second half is going to be without stimulus, with housing down, with employment continuing to go down, and the consumer continuing to get whipped," Birkelbach said.
Jume domestic car and truck sales are due on Thursday.
Volatility could rise this week, with fund managers selling their losers and buying winning stocks to adjust their portfolios at the end of the quarter.
Volume usually drops before the long weekend to mark the Independence Day holiday and that could increase volatility.
"If you don't have a lot of volume at the end of the week, you could always have big moves off of low volume," said Tim Holland, co-portfolio manager of Aston/TAMRO Diversified Equity Fund in Alexandria, Virginia. "You could have a smaller number of participants move things."
That could make for some tense moments with traders focused on market technicals after the S&P 500 failed to hold above its 200-day moving average during the week. Some investors see a move below that level as a bearish signal.
Michael Sheldon, chief market strategist at RDM Financial Group in Westport, Connecticut, said the market would likely be range bound in the weeks ahead.
"It looks like we're stuck in this trading range, with the downside around 1,040 to 1,050 and upside capped by the 50-day moving average, which right now is around 1,127," he said.
S&P 500 companies' earnings are expected to grow 26.8% in the second quarter, according to Thomson Reuters research.
This week will see some early earnings reports from S&P 500 corporations, including Micron Tech, General Mills, Apollo Group and Monsanto Co.
Positive results from Oracle late last Thursday buoyed stocks the next day as the market struggled for direction after Friday's mixed economic data.
Earnings season will start in earnest after Alcoa Inc, one of the 30 stocks that make up the Dow, reports results on July 12. ' Reuters
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