A Look At Expectations For Non-Farm Payrolls

Tomorrow is the first Friday of December, which means the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) will be releasing their payrolls and unemployment report for November. This is an important release at any time, but tomorrow’s report arrives less than two weeks ahead of an FOMC meeting where a speedier taper and more aggressive rate guidance are likely to be under consideration. Chair Powell has indicated a bit more nervousness about inflation, and reports of a robust labor market could accelerate the Federal Reserve’s move away from monetary stimulus.

Yesterday we received our first clue about the labor market from the ADP Employment Change report. Amidst the gyrations in the stock and bond markets, the in-line report was largely ignored. We saw growth in November employment of 534,000 vs expectations of 525,000, with a negligible adjustment of +1,000 to October’s report. The report was taken in stride, as equity futures were rallying strongly after Tuesday’s drop, and largely ignored as major US indices gave back their early gains and plunged in the afternoon. 

In prior months, we have looked to the ADP report ahead of previous BLS payrolls reports. We believe that ADP is a decent but imperfect predictor of the report released 2 days later, as the following chart shows:

BLS Nonfarm Payrolls (white) vs. ADP Employment Change (blue)

(Click on image to enlarge)

BLS Nonfarm Payrolls (white) vs. ADP Employment Change (blue)

Source: Bloomberg

There was a large divergence in the initial September report, but that was largely erased in last month’s revision. It does not appear that there is much to suggest that expectations for the coming report are particularly out of line, as the next graph shows:

BLS Nonfarm Payrolls (white) vs. Economist Survey (blue)

(Click on image to enlarge)

Source: Bloomberg

We see that economists have gotten their payroll estimates largely correct, at least when revisions are factored in. We have no way of knowing what the outcome will be, but it is reasonable to think that the estimates of an increase of 550,000 non-farm payrolls seems reasonable. 

Given the markets’ recent bout of volatility, an out-of-consensus result could prove to be yet another excuse for stock or bond markets to lurch. Tomorrow’s report may prove to be a case where traders are actually hoping for bad news. A stronger than expected report would further kindle fears that the Fed would be more aggressive in tapering purchases and more able to raise rates sooner than hoped, while a weaker result could be perceived as allowing the Fed to extend monetary stimulus more than currently expected.

In light of the recent volatility and ahead of yet another market-moving event, it is useful to take a quick glance at what options markets might be anticipating as well. The following graph shows multi-expiry skews for the next 2 weekly and 3 monthly SPY options expiries, using the TWS’ IV Viewer + Term Structure-function:

SPY Skew for Multiple Experies: Dec 3rd (green), 10th (purple), 17th(yellow), Jan 21st (orange), Feb 18th (red)

(Click on image to enlarge)

SPY Skew for Multiple Experies: Dec 3rd (green), 10th (purple), 17th(yellow), Jan 21st (orange), Feb 18th (red)

The chart displays a significant amount of risk aversion, with out-of-the-money puts trading with implied volatilities well above those of similarly out-of-the-money calls.We also see that the lowest implied volatilities are for options with strikes about 2-5% above the current level for SPY.I find that somewhat interesting, not because markets are bidding up for protective puts – traders typically pay more for hedges after a dip than before – but because they appear reluctant to be betting on a bounce.This can be somewhat explained by the expectation that implied volatilities across the board would be expected to dip if the market bounces significantly, but there does appear to more of a reluctance among SPY traders to buy the dip than one might have thought.

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