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Abstract:A stronger than expected payroll report last Friday pushed equity markets to another all-time high. The U.S. economy added 850,000 new jobs during June when the consensus expected 700,000. Whilst the headline number looks good, there’s plenty to be worried about under the hood, as the new jobs are mostly in those sectors of the economy that have reopened. For instance, the leisure and hospitality sectors added 343,000 new jobs, education around 269,000, and the retail sector 67,000. These add up to around 80% of the total; this is great at first glance but not in the long run since these sectors do not drive the productivity or wage growth required for sustainable expansion. In particular, the U.S. economy is 70% consumer driven, which emphasizes the importance of a healthy and wealthy labor market. With the country still 7 million jobs short of pre-pandemic levels and most of the recovery happening in low-paying and low-productivity sectors, there is still a long way to go before the
A stronger than expected payroll report last Friday pushed equity markets to another all-time high. The U.S. economy added 850,000 new jobs during June when the consensus expected 700,000. Whilst the headline number looks good, theres plenty to be worried about under the hood, as the new jobs are mostly in those sectors of the economy that have reopened. For instance, the leisure and hospitality sectors added 343,000 new jobs, education around 269,000, and the retail sector 67,000. These add up to around 80% of the total; this is great at first glance but not in the long run since these sectors do not drive the productivity or wage growth required for sustainable expansion. In particular, the U.S. economy is 70% consumer driven, which emphasizes the importance of a healthy and wealthy labor market. With the country still 7 million jobs short of pre-pandemic levels and most of the recovery happening in low-paying and low-productivity sectors, there is still a long way to go before the Federal Reserve Bank and the U.S. government take their foot off the stimulus gas.
Equity markets jumped on the back of the jobs report. S&P 500 was up 0.75% while Nasdaq 100 rose 1.15% on Friday. Both of these indices once again closed at an all-time high despite being over-extended based on technical indicators. While momentum indicators signal a bullish trend, prices are more than 3 standard deviations away from the mean when looking at the Keltner channels. Also, 14-day RSI and stochastic signal overbought levels. As such, a pullback to more sustainable levels seems likely during the upcoming week.
Oil Inches Higher as OPEC+ Continues Negotiations
Oil price, measured by USOIL, closed the week at $75 per barrel, its highest price since 2018, as OPEC and its allies failed to come to an agreement about future output. The bad apple this round was the UAE who refused to accept production cuts after April 2022, month when the initial agreement to curb output is scheduled to come to an end. The 23-nation group had agreed to increase production from August until year-end by around 400,000 barrels per day but also sought to extend the existing agreement until the end of 2022. The UAE, however, has disputed the extension past April of next year on the premise that its baseline production has increased. The proportional cuts of the UAE are much higher than those for the rest of OPEC+ members due to additional investments made by the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company.
UAEs attempt to keep the existing agreement separate from the proposed new agreement for the remainder of 2022 is causing friction among the cartel members who unanimously voted in favor of the tabled plan. OPEC+ ministers are scheduled to meet again on Monday, but the negotiations are going to be tense. Once the door is open for the UAE to increase its baseline, other members might request the same.
A higher baseline for the UAE might put downward pressure on oil prices, considering too that Irans supply might hit the market later this year. Extension of the production curbs, however, might push oil to new highs. Oil price is already up 55% year-to-date and technical indicators signal further upward momentum. Price is currently extended, as 14-day RSI is at 72 and stochastic at 80. However, strong momentum is likely to push the price through the near-term resistance level of $76. The next resistance level to be tested is at $80. Support levels have formed close to the 8-day exponential moving average at around $74 and the 79% Fibonacci retracement level at $73.
Equity markets benchmark index S&P 500 closed at 4,352.33 points, up 1.67%, while Nasdaq 100 gained 2.67% to 14,727.63 points. Russell 2000, representing small-cap stocks, shed 1.23%. The U.S. dollar, represented by the DXY index, had a strong week, as the greenback was up half a percentage point to $92.2. Despite a strong dollar, gold and oil rose by 0.33% and 1.50%, respectively.
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Crude Oil (WTI) - Rebound in the offing?
It’s the answer every oil trader is seeking, yet will likely get with only a certain degree of accuracy. With about two days left until the all-important ministerial meeting of OPEC+, few things are more crucial than figuring out where oil will be trading before the world alliance of oil producers lays down its policy decisions for December. Dozens of ideas abound on crude prices over the next 48 hours, with as many theories on why they should be so
Asian stocks made a soft start to the week on Monday while oil and the euro were under pressure, as the return of COVID-19 restrictions in Europe and talk about hastened tapering from the U.S. Federal Reserve put investors on guard.
Oil steadied near the psychological $80-a-barrel mark as a global power crunch rattled the market while OPEC+ output has been slow to ramp up.