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US Private Payrolls Rise Broadly in May

WASHINGTON, June 3 (Reuters) - U.S. private payrolls increased broadly in May, but economists cautioned against viewing the rise as a sign of a strengthening labor market, noting that other indicators continued to point ​to stabilizing conditions.

Private employment rose by 122,000 jobs last month after a downwardly ‌revised 105,000 gain in April, the ADP national employment report showed on Wednesday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast private employment increasing by 117,000 jobs after a previously reported 109,000 advance in April.

Last month's increase in hiring ​was across businesses of all sizes, and was led by the education and health ​services sector, which added 57,000 jobs. Trade, transportation and utilities payrolls rose 36,000. ⁠But there were job losses in the information and natural resources and mining industries.

The ADP ​report is jointly developed with the Stanford Digital Economy Lab, and was published ahead of the Bureau ​of Labor Statistics' more comprehensive and closely watched employment report for May on Friday. ADP has been a poor predictor of the BLS's private payrolls estimate.

"The indicators with a better track record of forecasting payrolls - the hiring ​intentions indexes of the NFIB and regional Federal Reserve surveys, as well as the job ​availability differential of the Conference Board's survey - have weakened in recent months," said Samuel Tombs, chief U.S. economist at Pantheon ‌Macroeconomics. "Evidence ⁠that the labor market is regaining momentum remains unconvincing."

The labor market has regained its footing after wobbling last year amid uncertainty stemming mostly from tariffs. While the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran has raised commodity prices and fanned inflation, layoffs have remained historically low, anchoring the labor market.

The Labor ​Department's Job Openings and Labor ​Turnover Survey, or ⁠JOLTS report, on Tuesday showed a surge in job openings in April, but they were concentrated in a single sector. Hiring decreased and layoffs ​fell, suggesting the solid increase in nonfarm payrolls in April was mostly due ​to lower ⁠layoffs.

Nonfarm payrolls likely increased by 85,000 jobs in May after rising 115,000 in April, a Reuters survey of economists predicted. The unemployment rate is forecast to be holding steady at 4.3%.

Financial markets expect the ⁠Federal Reserve ​will keep its benchmark overnight interest rate in the ​3.50%-3.75% range into next year, while monitoring the inflation fallout from the war.

Inflation increased at its fastest pace in three years ​in April, the government reported last week.

Reporting By Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Andrea Ricci

Source: Reuters


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