coronavirus

The Pace of Job Gains Likely Slowed in November Due to the Impact of Virus Shutdowns

Brendan McDermid | Reuters
  • Economists expect 440,000 jobs were added in November, compared to 638,000 in October, according to Dow Jones.
  • The payrolls report is expected to reflect the impact of shutdowns by state and local governments, as the virus spread at a record pace this fall.
  • The report could be the last one to show significant job gains over the next couple of months, as virus shutdowns impact activity and economic growth.

Job gains in November are expected to be weaker than in October, reflecting the impact of virus-related shutdowns by states and local governments due to the record spread of Covid-19.

Economists expect a consensus of 440,000 nonfarm payrolls were added in November, and the unemployment rate fell to 6.7% from 6.9%, according to Dow Jones. The total number of payrolls is likely to again be impacted by a sizeable drop in government jobs, due to layoffs of census workers by the federal government and cost cutting at the state and local level.

November could also be the last month to show significant job gains, until mid or late first quarter, when a large number of Americans should be vaccinated. Pfizer expects to begin providing its vaccine later this month, once it receives FDA approval, and Moderna is expected to receive approval soon after.

The employment report is released at 8:30 a.m. ET Friday.

In October, there were 638,000 jobs added, but government payrolls lost more than 260,000 positions. There are a wide range of forecasts for November with Bank of America expecting just a total 150,000 payrolls and others as high as 700,000.

"What we don't know is when restrictions started to bite," said Michael Gapen, chief U.S. economist at Bank of America. Many states have had travel advisories in place, urging visitors to quarantine, and some have added restrictions to both indoor and outdoor activities, to limit the spread. Los Angeles this week, for instance, issued new stay at home rules, and California could announce further state-wide restrictions.

"They started to go in around the middle of the month," said Gapen of the latest round of restrictions. He noted the government's mid-month survey week for the jobs report could have been impacted by the shutdowns. Gapen expects 550,000 payrolls were added in total, when including the loss of 100,000 census workers and 50,000 others from state and local governments.

"We think risks to our forecast are to the downside," he said. He expects goods production and construction to seen hiring gains, but analysts do not expect the normal surge in seasonal jobs in retail and hospitality this year.

"Fortunately, people are still spending. They're just doing more of it online," said David Berson, Nationwide chief economist. "There's a lot of non-internet firms that do online stuff. They've had to hire people and that will help take some of the sting away from what we think will be a pretty big drop next month in retail trade."

Berson said the negative impact of the lack of hiring for the holidays is likely to show up in December's report, which usually reflects seasonal hiring. Between that and the virus-related shutdowns, there could be job losses.

"December is the month in which we think it's most likely the employment number could be negative, but it's still temporary," Berson said.

Gapen expects the weakness to continue past December. "We suspect that December and January are pretty weak months," he said.

"Our growth forecast for the first quarter is zero," said Gapen. "There's short term pain in front of us. We don't think it will extend much past the first quarter if all the news on the timelines for the vaccine are correct. By the end of the first quarter, things will be looking much better."

Bank of America economists expect 150,000 payrolls were added in November, and they also caution the unemployment rate could rise, not fall, as the market expects.

"Additionally, the rise in covid-19 cases could pull employed workers out of the labor force temporarily, putting upward pressure on the unemployment rate. If realized, this would be the first month since the height of the pandemic where the unemployment rate did not decline," they wrote. "That said, the stall out should prove temporary as we expect that unemployment rate to reach 5.1% by year end 2021 on the back of solid 4.5% growth."

Jefferies economists also expect the unemployment rate could rise in November. "Frankly, it is hard to envision a particularly strong report coming out on Friday," they wrote. They forecast 340,000 payrolls were added in November.

Copyright CNBC
Contact Us