US private hiring surges to 291,000 in January: ADP
[WASHINGTON] American companies hired at a stunning pace in January, adding the most jobs in five years, according to data Wednesday from payrolls firm ADP.
Private companies added 291,000 new hires last month - surpassing the consensus forecast in spectacular fashion - to post the biggest gain since Dec 2014, according to ADP's monthly report.
Nearly all the increase was in the services sector, but there was a relatively healthy gain in manufacturing as well.
While the report is watched for signals on the critical government employment data due out Friday, economists warned that they expected the figure to be exaggerated as the data is frequently revised.
And Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody's Analytics, which helps produce the report, acknowledged that "mild winter weather provided a significant boost to the January employment gain."
The leisure, hospitality and construction industries "in particular experienced an outsized increase in jobs," he said in the report.
The construction sector has had two strong months, adding 47,000 jobs in January, while manufacturing gained 10,000 jobs, reversing the decline of the same amount in December. Health and education also have continued to hire at a solid pace.
Ian Shepherdson of Pantheon Macroeconomics, who predicted that the data would be inflated, said, "We are confident, though, that the official data on Friday will be much less spectacular."
And Mr Zandi too indicates the hiring frenzy will cool.
"Abstracting from the vagaries of the data underlying job growth is close to 125,000 per month, which is consistent with low and stable unemployment," he said.
Prior to the ADP data, economists expected the government to report a 155,000 gain in private employment, but Mr Shepherdson said he has boosted his forecast to 200,000.
AFP
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