Gold: Today's U.S. employment report is a fraud
Today's employment report is a complete fraud. But as long as the market and its army of mainstream storytellers focus just on the headline number, unicorns do exist. But the Devil is in the details:
There was also a large number of workers who were classified as employed but absent from work. As was the case in March and April, household survey interviewers were instructed to classify employed persons absent from work due to coronavirus-related business closures as unemployed on temporary layoff. However, it is apparent that not all such workers were so classified.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Census Bureau are investigating why this misclassification error continues to occur and are taking additional steps to address the issue.
If the workers who were recorded as employed but absent from work due to "other reasons" (over and above the number absent for other reasons in a typical May) had been classified as unemployed on temporary layoff, the overall unemployment rate would have been about 3 percentage points higher than reported (on a not-seasonally-adjusted basis). However, according to usual practice, the data from the household survey are accepted as recorded. To maintain data integrity, no ad-hoc actions are taken to reclassify survey responses.
Heres the source link from the BLS report, scroll to the bottom:
bls.gov
This is before looking at the actual line-item date estimates (more like guesstimates) in the household and establishment data. Most of the numbers in the line-items for each industry are simply not credible.
As a colleague points out, "This is the same nonsense that happened before the November 2012 presidential election, when jobs growth was egregiously overstated and then revised lower over the next several months." ...
... For the remainder of the analysis:
investmentresearchdynamics.com
By Dave Kranzler Investment Research Dynamics, Denver Friday, June 5, 2020 |