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The BLS Reports Employment in the Second Quarter Fell By 287 Thousand

BLS Business Employment Dynamics Summary by the BLS

Please consider the Business Employment Dynamics Summary for the second quarter of 2022.

Key Points

  • From March 2022 to June 2022, gross job gains from opening and expanding private-sector establishments were 8.3 million, a decrease of 185,000 jobs from the previous quarter.
  • Private-sector establishments were 8.5 million, an increase of 1.6 million jobs from the previous quarter. Over this period, gross job losses from closing and contracting private-sector establishments were 8.5 million, an increase of 1.6 million jobs from the previous quarter.
  • The difference between the number of gross job gains and the number of gross job losses yielded a net employment loss of 287,000 jobs in the private sector during the second quarter of 2022.

Gross Job Gains

  • In the second quarter of 2022, gross job gains represented 6.4 percent of private-sector employment. Gross job gains are the sum of increases in employment due to expansions at existing establishments and the addition of new jobs at opening establishments. Gross job gains at expanding establishments totaled 6.6 million in the second quarter of 2022, a decrease of 335,000 jobs compared to the previous quarter.
  • Opening establishments accounted for 1.7 million of the jobs gained in the second quarter of 2022, an increase of 150,000 jobs from the previous quarter.

Gross Job Losses

  • In the second quarter of 2022, gross job losses represented 6.7 percent of private-sector employment.
  • Gross job losses are the result of contractions in employment at existing establishments and the loss of jobs at closing establishments. Contracting establishments lost 6.5 million jobs in the second quarter of 2022, an increase of 996,000 jobs from the prior quarter.
  • In the second quarter of 2022, closing establishments lost 2.1 million jobs, an increase of 651,000 jobs from the previous quarter.

This report matches what I have been saying for months.

Noise vs Reality

November 4: Is Full Time Employment a Trend or Noise? Despite the headline numbers, today’s job report was quite weak.

December 2: Another Strong Jobs Report? Phooey, and I Can Prove It

January 6: December Employment Rises by 717,000 All of Them Part Time

Payrolls vs Employment Since March 2022

  • Nonfarm Payrolls: +2,887,000
  • Employment Level: +916,000
  • Full Time Employment: -288,000

Full time employment is down 288,000 since March and down by 444,000 since May!

Mainstream media misses general miss the big picture captured in the above chart. This is not strong employment growth.

Average Work Week Has Peaked and Total Aggregate Hours Is Rolling Over

On January 11, I noted Average Work Week Has Peaked and Total Aggregate Hours Is Rolling Over

What Does the Demand for Temporary Help Suggest About a Recession?

On January 24, I asked What Does the Demand for Temporary Help Suggest About a Recession?

Three BLS Data Streams

The BLS has three data streams on employment and jobs. Two reports are monthly. The third comes out quarterly.

  • Establishment Survey: The establishment survey or Current Employment Statistics (CES) is the monthly jobs report that the Fed and nearly everyone else hangs their hats on.
  • Household Survey: The household survey also comes out monthly. It is a phone survey in which the BLS asks if someone is working or not and if so, how many hours. The unemployment rate is from the Household survey. Curiously, people have a lot of faith in the unemployment rate, but no faith on employment numbers. 
  • The Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) comes out quarterly as the name suggests.

QCEW vs CES

Whereas the QCEW data cover more than 95 percent of all employers, the CES sample represents just 6 percent of the QCEW total.

Let that sink in for one second. It shouldn’t take any longer.

The lead chart of the Business Employment Dynamics Summary is based on QCEW data.

Q2 QCEW Employment vs CES Jobs vs Household Survey

  • QCEW March-June: -287,000
  • Household Survey Employment March-June: -271,000
  • CES Establishment Survey March-June: +1,047,000

Guess what?

It seems the household data makes far more sense than the widely accepted establishment survey.

And that is for Q2. The second half of the year, especially the fourth quarter certainly did not strengthen.

The Philadelphia Fed Just Revised Jobs Lower by 1.2 Million for Q2

On December 16, I commented The Philadelphia Fed Just Revised Jobs Lower by 1.2 Million for Q2

In the aggregate, 10,500 net new jobs were added during the period rather than the 1,121,500 jobs estimated by the sum of the states; the U.S. CES estimated net growth of 1,047,000 jobs for the period. Payroll jobs in the nation remained essentially flat from March through June 2022 after adjusting for QCEW data

The CES program relies on a monthly nationwide survey of about 131,000 businesses and government agencies representing about 670,000 establishments. These samples are used to estimate total employment not only of states and MSAs but also of industrial sectors within states and MSAs. In contrast to the CES sample of 670,000 establishments, the QCEW program reported employment counts for nearly 11 million establishments covered by state and federal unemployment insurance (UI) laws in the first quarter of 2021. The QCEW data for October, November, and December 2021 were released on June 8, 2022.

That estimate was based on QCEW data. We now have the actual Q2 results.

And here’s the kicker.

Looking Ahead

Our Early Benchmark process should note larger downward revisions in December 2022. Not until February 2024—with the incorporation of the March 2023 benchmarks—will the CES estimates offer a full accounting of U.S. employment for the bulk of 2022. Unfortunately, our Early Benchmarks lag the moments when critical policy deliberations are made, but they do offer earlier confirmation of apparent shifts in recent payroll job trends. And pervasive, persistent, and deep downward revisions may presage the NBER’s declaration of a recession. 

Just Noise

Not to worry, it’s just noise. 

Retail Sales 

Month-Over-Month Advances and Declines

  • Food Service: -0.9 percent
  • Food Stores: +0.0 percent
  • Gas Stations: -4.6 Percent
  • General Merchandise: -0.8 Percent
  • Excluding Motor Vehicles and Gas: -0.7 Percent
  • Excluding Motor Vehicles: -1.1 Percent
  • Nonstore (Think Amazon): -1.1 Percent
  • Motor Vehicles: -1.2 Percent
  • Department Stores: -6.6 Percent

Real spending fell off the cliff starting November and accelerated in December. For discussion, please see What Do Real Income and Spending Suggest About Recession Timing?

Signs Say Industrial Production Has Peaked and so a Recession is Imminent

Recession lead times in months based on Fed data.

Please note Signs Say Industrial Production Has Peaked and so a Recession is Imminent

Are those noise too?

Let’s see what Wonderland has to say.

Alice Debates the Mad Hatter and the Red Queen on Timing the Recession

Alice challenged the Mad Hatter, the Red Queen, and the March Hare to a debate on whether or not the economy was in a recession.

The Mad Hatter, Red Queen, and March Hare all touted strong jobs as the reason there would be no recession.

For discussion, please see Alice Debates the Mad Hatter and the Red Queen on Timing the Recession

I also take a look at the inflationary aspects of climate change. If you haven’t read that article, please do.

Meanwhile, please note the Fed is looking at jobs data that is grossly wrong and six months old to boot.

This post originated at MishTalk.Com

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24 Comments
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vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
per economist newspaper, even facebook, in spite of 10k layoff, still employ like 70k more than they did since pandemic started. i think you are grasping at straws now mish. no other source does economics better than economist, and they are correct, the job market is so strong for so many reasons. i still cannot find one person who is out of a job and wants one. i’m in community college first week and asked all the kids. boro of manhattan CC. half are immigrants from 4 corners of the globe. italy to haiti and yemen and china……….NOT ONE OUT OF WORK. these are 19 year old un educated with 2 strikes against them compared to native borns……. the restaurants and subways have not been this packed in 2 years. workers commuting. i think you should pack up your year long wrong call, and just admit you got it wrong. so much easier. i know i’m wrong about 80% on my very successful trading career over 40 years. the trick is to just book the losses early and small before it becomes a farce and you lose your shirt and confidence. just a tip. i still really enjoy your blog. especially the r/e analysis. i did notice what looked like a 40 story building outside my class windown which looks like they have stopped work on it. the commercial r/e market is a very slow ticking time bomb. imho. and residential is imploding fast out west and looks to be hitting working class hoods in brooklyn and queens………….and for sure phoenix and bay area where i recently sold many properties 8 months ago.
MPO45
MPO45
3 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
Correct. I think it’s mathematically impossible to have a recession when the labor market is really tight and will likely continue to do so until something big happens. And by big I mean a large default like Lehman or government default or global war or pandemic 2 or similar scale.
As long as people have jobs and labor is tight, wages will continue to climb and so too will inflation. United Airlines CEO was saying they have so much business but not enough labor to fill it. The demand is there, the supply is not. Add to it that 10,000 boomer retire each day and that will continue for the next 7 years and I just don’t see how we get to a recession with a tight labor market.
The Fed will keep hiking and that will damage housing until that breaks (my target is January 2024 for that fiasco) and that may lead to defaults/bankruptcies. Until then we’ll probably get daily recession posts until the host gets a recession.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Not to worry.
Good to see that Food Stores are up +0.0 percent.
Perhaps they will stabilize eggs at $5/dozen.
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
3 years ago
Reply to  Lisa_Hooker
Ze bugs are still $3/dozen.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Governments will always say what they hope is true. Doesn’t mean they always lie. Sometimes what they hope is true is actually true. So the few times they tell the truth, it’s not driven by a morale drive to not lie. it’s just a coincidence.
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
Leadership is about creating a vision and getting people to help you realize it.
Salmo Trutta
Salmo Trutta
3 years ago
Both the volume of savings and the savings’ rate are down. Inflation is eating up incomes. Considering that trend, a recession is inevitable.
Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Makes you wonder who is picking up the phone on the Household Survey.
So many phishing calls these days nobody picks up the phone anymore. Even if someone picks up, wonder who is going to give sensitive information to someone they do not personally know.
Even phishing callers are moving onto sending phishing texts with such low pickup rate.
So my call that household survey numbers are bogus too lol.
PapaDave
PapaDave
3 years ago
Started trading Tesla (and Apple and Netflix) in late December after so many commenters here predicted Tesla was heading down, down, down. Traded it a bunch of times. Last sold at $129. Apparently, that was a mistake as its now up a lot from there.
I am finding that it is often lucrative to do the opposite of what the “experts” here recommend. Thanks everyone!
And how about Chevron! Increasing the dividend and starting $75 billion in buybacks (20% of shares). Nice!
MPO45
MPO45
3 years ago
Reply to  PapaDave
JPow gonna hike next week so I’d be careful with trading around next week. I’m mostly sitting in cash and T-bills at this point. I got assigned on my exxon calls which is a good thing, made $6/share on those puppies.
I am reading too many scenarios about bank runs and defaults that I am not sure even cash is safe though. The current clowns in the House may be crazy enough to let a default happen because if they can’t rule the way they want they will prefer to see the world in ruin.
PapaDave
PapaDave
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45
Always difficult to balance risk. My cash percentage is rising, but still just under 20%. Still trading, but taking smaller risks due to cautious outlook. However, that meant missing out on the big Tesla gains in the last few days. But I never cry over missed opportunities. Can’t be perfect.
Todays numbers; GDP 2.9% (higher than expected), claims 186 k (lower than expected), durables (higher). Oil still going up.
Recession or slow growth? I still see slow growth.
Higher rates will definitely push more zombies into bankruptcy. Can that start a cascade of failures? Probably not.
Not worried about US default.
MPO45
MPO45
3 years ago
Reply to  PapaDave
The key thing to worry about right now are black swan events: big defaults, big bankruptcies, big counter-party failures, war, etc. Unfortunately, there is no way to study those because they are often random or triggered by some other event out of the blue.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  PapaDave
own that with a hat tip to you papa. i also bought the chinese EV auto BYDDY a month or two ago. they have huge tax incentives too, and gonna dominate china and europe and others……….in that market. tsla is great, but musk is a huckster. i’ve traded the stock, but the guy seems as sleazy as trump. i remember his original deals with solar company………
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
We’re doomed.
I’ve stocked on a ten year supply of provisions, have shot gun handy and seeking a forgotten WW2 nuclear shelter, see you guys in a decade.
Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
They did not have nuclear bunkers in WW2. Was a 1950s thing. Good luck though – did you find one in the market?
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
remember the old adage that in really doom times, women’s moon cycle gear and medicine is top of list for any pioneer heading out to prairie or sea to escape humanity………in other words, stock up on tampons. way more valuable than guns, gold or god, when times get tight.
Eric89011
Eric89011
3 years ago
Lots of lower paying part time jobs available!
PapaDave
PapaDave
3 years ago
“More evidence suggests the Nonfarm Payroll job reports by the BLS are totally bogus.”
If they are “totally bogus”, I assume that means you aren’t going to bother looking at them and reporting on them anymore?
What will you focus on instead? The Household report? How do you know that isn’t bogus as well?
You have a difficult job trying to decipher all these reports.
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
Reply to  PapaDave
LOL, if Mish flames you I won’t blame him.
That said, I agree, let’s stop acknowledging economic reports have any merit at all and make up our own.
I’m sure there’ll be revisions, but the non-stop economic doom scrolling gets old…. I’d rather see some idea’s on how to capitalize on our current state, maybe predict sector trends for the coming year, business ideas, even short ideas.
.
.
PapaDave
PapaDave
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
These reports are all just best guesses based on minimal data. And sometimes they are way off.
However, watching the trends in these reports over longer time periods gives one a sense of direction, at best.
I appreciate that Mish puts so much time into them. Because I sure can’t be bothered.
MPO45
MPO45
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
If you want to know what’s going on with the economy the best thing to do is read the 10Qs that come out quarterly. The reports from public companies are as close as you’re gonna get to reality.
DR Horton just released earnings yesterday. They did well but have 27% cancellation rate. KB Homes reported earlier and they had 68% cancellation. This is far better barometer than anything NAR releases.
Microsoft also reported this week with a gloomy forecast. by the time government statistics report this it will be ancient history.
I honestly don’t care what job revisions were in Q2 of 2022, that’s ancient history at this point. I want to know what’s happening next quarter so I can profit accordingly.
I bought more PUTS on home builders this week for January 19 2024 expiry. I expect housing to fall apart by Q3 or Q4 of this year.
Our sales order cancellation rate (cancelled sales orders divided by gross sales orders for the period) was 27% in the
three months ended December 31, 2022 compared to 15% in the prior year period. The higher current period cancellation rate
reflects the moderation in demand we have experienced as mortgage rates increased substantially and inflationary pressures
remain elevated, while the prior year cancellation rate was historically low due to strong demand.
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45
And then, there’s JOLTs which is still above 10 million.
Each mass layoff in tech or a megacorp is a sigh of relief for countless mid/small sized businesses and Fed watchers.
I know of numerous restaurants and small businesses that either went out of business or had to downsize for lack of help.
Let’s not forget, this is not your typical market rout, conditions are inverse to the usual … We’re rooting for layoffs.
.
Six000mileyear
Six000mileyear
3 years ago
Corporate America isn’t waiting for the government to declare a recession.
Call_Me
Call_Me
3 years ago
“Meanwhile, please note the Fed is looking at jobs data that is grossly wrong and six months old to boot.”
Perhaps they are just directing the public’s attention to grossly wrong, stale data.
Casting the Fed as bumbling and incompetent may appear be apt, but in the end it is an organization that functions to support and enrich the member banks. That would be an awfully long track record of failure leading to success.
Call_Me_Al

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