After 52 straight months of gains, job growth finally gave way in January.
The Labor Department reported that non-farm payrolls dipped by 17,000 last month, the first case of red ink since August 2003. Granted, a loss of 17,000 in a labor pool of nearly 159 million is insignificant. In fact, we wouldn’t rule out a revision to positive territory next month. Indeed, the first report of December’s paltry 18,000 rise in nonfarm payrolls was revised up today to a more respectable 82,000 gain.
But revisions can’t reverse the downturn now gathering momentum throughout the economy. The all-important trend in job creation is clearly downshifting. It’s obvious in one-month and 12-month comparisons. And as today’s numbers suggest, the warning signs are no longer confined to manufacturing.
The service sector, which accounts for more than 80% of U.S. employment, eked out a tiny gain last month, creating just 34,000 new jobs. That’s a rounding error in the context of 116 million people working in the service sector. It’s also the first time since October 2005 that the service sector employment growth was effectively flat.
Daily Archives: February 1, 2008
THE JANUARY EFFECT
Asset allocation has regained its rightful place as the only game in town for strategic-minded investors, as January’s tally of performance among the major asset classes reminds.
The range of returns was a robust 14.1 percentage points last month among the major asset classes. On top: foreign developed market bonds, which posted a 5.2% total return in January, by way of our proxy, the PIMCO Foreign Bond (Unhedged) D mutual fund. At the bottom was emerging market stocks, which shed 8.9%, as per iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF.
Long gone are the days when everything went up, which meant that the stakes tied to asset allocation and rebalancing were minimal. In 2008, the reverse is true and rising volatility and falling correlations among the major asset classes are the reasons. We expect no less going forward.
As the economic cycle turns, risk is reassessed and repriced on a case-by-case basis. Investors will become increasingly selective in weighing the potential outlook of bonds vs. stocks, domestic vs. foreign, commodities vs. equities, and so on. Such discriminating behavior fell on hard times during 2002-2007. But the fog is thicker than usual for gazing into the future, and investors are becoming more discerning.