Benzinga

España
Italia
대한민국
日本
Français
Benzinga Edge
Benzinga Research
Benzinga Pro

  • Get Benzinga Pro
  • Data & APIs
  • Events
  • Premarket
  • Advertise
Contribute
España
Italia
대한민국
日本
Français

Benzinga

  • Premium Services
  • Financial News
    Latest
    Earnings
    Guidance
    Dividends
    M&A
    Buybacks
    Interviews
    Management
    Offerings
    IPOs
    Insider Trades
    Biotech/FDA
    Politics
    Healthcare
    Small-Cap
  • Markets
    Pre-Market
    After Hours
    Movers
    ETFs
    Options
    Cryptocurrency
    Commodities
    Bonds
    Futures
    Mining
    Real Estate
    Volatility
  • Ratings
    Analyst Color
    Downgrades
    Upgrades
    Initiations
    Price Target
  • Investing Ideas
    Trade Ideas
    Long Ideas
    Short Ideas
    Technicals
    Analyst Ratings
    Analyst Color
    Latest Rumors
    Whisper Index
    Stock of the Day
    Best Stocks & ETFs
    Best Penny Stocks
    Best S&P 500 ETFs
    Best Swing Trade Stocks
    Best Blue Chip Stocks
    Best High-Volume Penny Stocks
    Best Small Cap ETFs
    Best Stocks to Day Trade
    Best REITs
  • Money
    Investing
    Cryptocurrency
    Mortgage
    Insurance
    Yield
    Personal Finance
    Forex
    Startup Investing
    Real Estate Investing
    Prop Trading
    Credit Cards
    Stock Brokers
Research
My Stocks
Tools
Free Benzinga Pro Trial
Calendars
Analyst Ratings Calendar
Conference Call Calendar
Dividend Calendar
Earnings Calendar
Economic Calendar
FDA Calendar
Guidance Calendar
IPO Calendar
M&A Calendar
Unusual Options Activity Calendar
SPAC Calendar
Stock Split Calendar
Trade Ideas
Stock Reports
Insider Trades
Trade Idea Feed
Analyst Ratings
Unusual Options Activity
Heatmaps
Free Newsletter
Government Trades
Perfect Stock Portfolio
Easy Income Portfolio
Short Interest
Most Shorted
Largest Increase
Largest Decrease
Calculators
Margin Calculator
Forex Profit Calculator
100x Options Profit Calculator
Screeners
Stock Screener
Top Momentum Stocks
Top Quality Stocks
Top Value Stocks
Top Growth Stocks
Compare Best Stocks
Best Momentum Stocks
Best Quality Stocks
Best Value Stocks
Best Growth Stocks
Connect With Us
facebookinstagramlinkedintwitteryoutubeblueskymastodon
About Benzinga
  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Market Resources
  • Advanced Stock Screener Tools
  • Options Trading Chain Analysis
  • Comprehensive Earnings Calendar
  • Dividend Investor Calendar and Alerts
  • Economic Calendar and Market Events
  • IPO Calendar and New Listings
  • Market Outlook and Analysis
  • Wall Street Analyst Ratings and Targets
Trading Tools & Education
  • Benzinga Pro Trading Platform
  • Options Trading Strategies and News
  • Stock Market Trading Ideas and Analysis
  • Technical Analysis Charts and Indicators
  • Fundamental Analysis and Valuation
  • Day Trading Guides and Strategies
  • Live Investor Events
  • Pre-market Stock Analysis and News
  • Cryptocurrency Market Analysis and News
Ring the Bell

A newsletter built for market enthusiasts by market enthusiasts. Top stories, top movers, and trade ideas delivered to your inbox every weekday before and after the market closes.

  • Terms & Conditions
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Data/Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Service Status
  • Sitemap
© 2026 Benzinga | All Rights Reserved
October 6, 2014 10:39 AM 2 min read

Jobs Data Highlights The Fed's 'Sweet Spot'

by Ron Mark Benzinga Staff Writer
Follow
Friday's much anticipated
jobs report
brought some buying into the equity market and a pull back in long-term bond rates. After rallying much of the week, the 10-year note sold off two basis points and closed at 2.43 percent.

Inside The Jobs Report

The overall US economy added 248,00 new jobs in September and the private sector portion was 236,000. The prior month was also revised up to 180,000 from the previously reported 142,000.

Other closely watched indicators in the report suggest that the improving jobs market is not generating any wage growth or inflationary pressures. In fact, the overall size of the labor pool continues to fall. The labor participation was 62.7, the lowest in 36 years.

Related Link: Economic Data Mixed To Start Week; Key Unemployment Data Due Frida

Average Weekly Hours were unchanged, as was the length of the workweek. Average Hourly Earnings fell by 0.1 percent for the month. The data suggests the strong jobs creation has yet to trigger any progress toward wage inflation. Without wage growth, price inflation or an increase demand for credit are difficult to generate.

The stronger dollar, which makes foreign labor and equipment cheaper for business owners, is also putting downward pressure on wages. The U.S. Dollar Index closed near its 52 week high at 86.64.

The lack of wage growth is not a result of significant labor slack. The jobs market continues to tighten.

The overall unemployment rate fell to 5.9 percent, the lowest since July 2008. The U-6 rate, which includes those working part-time due to economic conditions, went down from 12.0 percent to 11.8 percent.

The Fed's Sweet Spot

The Federal Reserve is in a rare “sweet spot”.

The U.S. economy is approaching full employment without any inflationary pressures on the horizon. The strong dollar, lack of wage pressures, and economic slowdowns around the world are keeping U.S. prices stable. Last month it was reported that year-over-year CPI was 1.7 percent, below the Fed's target of 2 percent.

After QE3 ends, the Fed can remain data dependent before raising the Fed Funds Rate. The consensus among economists remains for the first rate hike in July of 2015. Nothing in last Friday's report will change that outlook.

When the tightening cycle does begin, the Fed can raise rates gradually as long as inflationary pressures remain muted. The drop in oil and commodity prices suggests that market participants have lowered their inflationary expectations going forward.

The U.S. Treasury market continues to be an attractive investment for foreign capital.

In addition to the safe–haven quality during times of geo-political tensions and falling global equity markets, the U.S. bond market offers an substantial yield pickup to similar maturities in Europe and Asia. Last, the strong dollar allows foreign investors to reap capital gains in both the underlying asset and the currency appreciation.

Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs

© 2026 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

To add Benzinga News as your preferred source on Google, click here.


Posted In:
BondsFederal ReserveMarketsTrading Ideas
Beat the Market With Our Free Pre-Market Newsletter
Enter your email to get Benzinga's ultimate morning update: The PreMarket Activity Newsletter
Comments
Loading...