Interpretation of the Three Major Non-Farm Indicators|How Wages, Employment, and Unemployment Drive Market Movements
Average Hourly Earnings m/m
- Measures the percentage change in the average hourly wage paid by businesses compared to the previous month.
- This is an early signal for observing inflation. If wages rise, it usually means stronger consumer spending power, which may push up prices.
- Rapid wage growth may prompt the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates to curb inflation.
Non-Farm Employment Change
- Measures the number of jobs added or lost last month, excluding the agricultural sector.
- This is the core data of the report. Since the U.S. economy is consumer-driven, an increase in employment means more people have income, signaling economic expansion.
- One of the most volatile data points; forex (e.g., USD), gold, and equities can react sharply the moment this data is released.
نرخ بیکاری
- The percentage of the labor force that is capable of working, actively seeking a job, but has not found employment in the past month.
- Although important, it usually reacts slower than “Non-Farm Employment Change.”
Why You Need to Consider All Three Non-Farm Indicators|Decoding the Real Signal Behind Employment Data
In forex trading, focusing on just one number in the Non-Farm report can be misleading. True insights into the economy only emerge when you analyze all three key indicators together: average hourly earnings, employment change, and the unemployment rate.
- Non-Farm Employment: It tells you whether companies are hiring. A positive number indicates business confidence and economic growth.
- Unemployment Rate: Non-Farm surveys businesses (employers), while the unemployment rate surveys households (individuals). Sometimes companies hire many temporary workers (Non-Farm rises), but unemployment also rises because more people enter the labor force seeking jobs. The unemployment rate reflects the real size of idle labor in society.
- Hourly Wage Growth: Even if everyone has a job, if wages do not rise, consumption power remains insufficient. Conversely, if wages surge, businesses may pass costs onto consumers, causing inflation.
Conclusion: Only by combining the three can one judge whether the current growth is high-quality or a false boom.
From Data to Market: How Non-Farm Drives Market Volatility Through Interest Rate Expectations
NFP impacts the market mainly through expectations of rate hikes/cuts:
- Stronger than Expected (Bullish USD): Indicates a strong economy; the Fed may raise or maintain high rates. Funds flow into the USD, causing the DXY to surge, while non-USD currencies and commodities come under pressure.
- Weaker than Expected (Bearish USD): Indicates economic slowdown; the Fed may lean toward cutting rates. The USD weakens, and funds flow into gold and non-USD currencies seeking returns.
In short, don’t Treat Non-Farm as a Casino; Risk Control Is Your Shield. Better to miss a trade than to get risk control wrong. Non-Farm trading is about logic, not luck; if you don’t understand the spatiotemporal setup, standing by is the top-level trading discipline.