The BLS was expected to show a gain of 155K jobs in the US Non-Farm Payrolls report for April 2013. The unemployment rate was expected to stand at 7.6%, which was the level for March (before revisions).
Towards the release, EUR/USD was still digesting the ECB rate decision made yesterday
The Details
- Non-Farm Payrolls:Â +165K
- Participation Rate:  63.3% (63.3% last month– the worst since 1979)
- Unemployment Rate: 7.5%Â (last month 7.6% before revisions)
- Revisions: +114K. Last month saw revisions of -61K.
- Private Sector NFP:Â +73KÂ (Last month:+95K)
- Real Unemployment Rate (U-6): 14.1 (previous: 13.8%) – big fall.
- Employment to population ratio:Â 58.6% Â (previous: 58.6%)
- Average Hourly Earnings: 0.2%% versus +0.2% expected.
- Average workweek: 34.4 hours (Last month: 34.6 hours).
Background
After a good start to the year in terms of economic indicators, the picture has changed, with quite a few disappointments in recent months. Last month’s Non-Farm Payrolls was undoubtedly a weak report, with gains of only 88K jobs. Another significant warning sign came from the initial GDP report: the economy grew at annual pace of  only 2.5% in Q1 2013 – the strong start wasn’t that strong. Contrary to previous reports, this one lacked one of the most leading indicators: the ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI. The services sector is the vast majority of the US economy, and the employment component in this report tends to be well correlated with the NFP.