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    Fed’s Goolsbee: don’t want to ‘blow through’ full employment

    “We never want to overreact to any one month’s numbers,” Goolsbee said in a Bloomberg TV interview. Even so, he said, “Our absolute goal now is we want to settle at something like full employment, not blow through normal and deteriorate.” The U.S. Labor Department reported earlier on Friday that employers slowed hiring sharply in July, and the unemployment rate rose to 4.3%. That’s above the 4.1% rate that Fed policymakers’ estimate is consistent with full employment, Goolsbee said. Fed policy is restrictive and tight, he said, and he noted that inflation has come down and the labor market has cooled in the year that the Fed has kept its policy rate steady, suggesting that he remains supportive of easing policy. He declined to say when or by how much the Fed should cut rates, repeating his view that he does not want to tie his hands on policy ahead of any given Fed meeting. More

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    Four reasons to take a breath after the U.S. jobs report

    (Reuters) – The disappointing U.S. employment report for July unleashed a “Freakout Friday” moment in financial markets and triggered a wholesale resetting of expectations for how much the Federal Reserve might cut interest rates next month.There was much to grimace about in the Bureau of Labor Statistics report card on the job market, including a jump in the unemployment rate to a post-pandemic high and the weakest pace of private-sector hiring in 16 months.That said, the report was not without its bright spots like a second straight month of hefty workforce growth and came with some fat caveats, including a big debate underway about the weather.Here are four reasons to take a breath and accept that the report may not signal the end is near.BIG BAD BERYLThe BLS added a big footnote to the first page of Friday’s release to say Hurricane Beryl – which slammed into Texas during the employment report survey week and left some 2.7 million homes and businesses in the Houston area without power for days – “had no discernible effect” on the month’s data.A number of economists said: “Whoa!”For one thing, they said, just look at the number of people who reported not being at work due to bad weather: 436,000 nonfarm workers and 461,000 with agriculture workers included.That is not just a record for the month of July, it was more than 10 times the July average dating back to 1976 when BLS started tracking the metric. And more than 1 million others could only work part time due to the weather, also a record for the month.”We are not sure that we absolve Beryl of any responsibility for the weakness in this data,” Jefferies U.S. economist Thomas Simons wrote.TEMPORARY LAYOFFSThe number of people who said their job loss was temporary was the highest in about three years last month and accounted for more than half of the overall increase in the number of unemployed of 352,000.If their temporary layoffs last only a few weeks or don’t become permanent, economists expect most of those people will report as employed in the report for August that will come out next month.Again, Beryl may be a culprit here.”We think some of those layoffs may have been related to Hurricane Beryl,” Oxford Economics Lead U.S. Economist Nancy Vanden Houten wrote.CONSTRUCTION JOBS STILL HUMMINGConstruction work, often a leading indicator of coming shifts in the economy, especially for sectors like home building, continued growing last month at roughly the pace of the last year. The 25,000 new jobs was also somewhat above the roughly 20,000 construction jobs added on average each month of the five years prior to the pandemic, a period Fed officials often reminisce about.That could augur for a recovery in housing starts, which have been sluggish for months.PRIME-AGED PRIME TIMEEconomists keep close track of so-called “prime-aged workers” – those between 25 and 54 years old – because they account for such a big chunk of the U.S. workforce.And those prime-agers are trundling back to the labor force in sizeable numbers.The prime-aged labor force participation rate rose in July to 84%, the highest since 2001.For prime-aged men, their rate ticked up to 90% – the first nine-handle since the 2007-2009 financial crisis.And for prime-aged women, it was back to record territory. At 78.1% last month, the rate matched a record high first set in May. More

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    Catalan separatists back government deal with socialists

    BARCELONA (Reuters) – Grassroots members of Catalonia’s separatist ERC party supported on Friday a regional government deal with Spain’s ruling Socialists that could patch up Madrid’s uneasy relations with the region but also impact Spain’s entire fiscal system. A narrow majority of ERC members voted in favour of the agreement to name Socialist Salvador Illa as new head of the regional government, according to party sources.The northeastern region, one of Spain’s wealthiest, has been governed by separatists since 2010. The peak of the independence drive came in 2017, when the Catalan government called a referendum to secede from Spain, deemed illegal by courts and resulting in a short-lived declaration of independence.The nationalist movement’s influence has since ebbed, failing to garner sufficient backing to form a government in May’s regional election, won by the centre-left Socialists without a working majority. The only way to avoid a repeat election lay through an agreement between the winning party and the left-wing, separatist ERC, to support Illa.After the ERC’s members’ approval, an investiture vote could be held as soon as next week.Under a preliminary deal agreed on Monday, Catalonia would become autonomous in collecting and managing taxes that could clash with the Spain-wide fiscal systems where poorer regions receive a portion of the more affluent regions’ revenues and prompt other regions to demand similar privileges.Such a shift would still have to be approved by a highly- fragmented Spanish parliament. Much of the opposition and even some regional Socialist leaders have criticised the proposal that stipulates that Catalonia will continue to demonstrate “solidarity” with the rest of Spain, albeit without providing specific details. Juan Perez, a researcher at the IVIE economic think-tank, warned that this ambiguity threatens the national fiscal system’s fairness where “Madrid, Catalonia and the Balearic Islands have very wealthy taxpayers who aid other regions such as Extremadura and Castille-La Mancha”.Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has called the deal “a step towards federalisation” and “good news” for Spain. Sanchez is no stranger to risky gambles involving Catalan separatists after granting an amnesty to their convicted leaders in exchange for crucial support of his latest term as premier last year. More

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    Fed under fire as slowing jobs market fans fears of recession

    Standard DigitalWeekend Print + Standard Digitalwasnow $85 per monthBilled Quarterly at $199. Complete digital access plus the FT newspaper delivered Monday-Saturday.What’s included Global news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print editionWeekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts10 monthly gift articles to shareGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print editionEverything in PrintWeekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisPlusEverything in Premium DigitalEverything in Standard DigitalGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresFirstFT newsletterVideos & PodcastsFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit app10 gift articles per monthExclusive FT analysisPremium newslettersFT Digital Edition10 additional gift articles per monthMake and share highlightsFT WorkspaceMarkets data widgetSubscription ManagerWorkflow integrationsOccasional readers go freeVolume discountFT Weekend Print deliveryPlusEverything in Standard DigitalFT Weekend Print deliveryPlusEverything in Premium Digital More

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    America’s long consumer boom begins to falter

    Standard DigitalWeekend Print + Standard Digitalwasnow $85 per monthBilled Quarterly at $199. Complete digital access plus the FT newspaper delivered Monday-Saturday.What’s included Global news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print editionWeekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts10 monthly gift articles to shareGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print editionEverything in PrintWeekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisPlusEverything in Premium DigitalEverything in Standard DigitalGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresFirstFT newsletterVideos & PodcastsFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit app10 gift articles per monthExclusive FT analysisPremium newslettersFT Digital Edition10 additional gift articles per monthMake and share highlightsFT WorkspaceMarkets data widgetSubscription ManagerWorkflow integrationsOccasional readers go freeVolume discountFT Weekend Print deliveryPlusEverything in Standard DigitalFT Weekend Print deliveryPlusEverything in Premium Digital More

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    Fed rate cuts loom large as US job market slows sharply

    (Reuters) -U.S. central bankers may be having second thoughts about their decision earlier this week to hold borrowing costs steady, after a government report on Friday showed the job market slowed sharply last month.Employers added just 114,000 jobs in July, the U.S. Labor Department reported, and the unemployment rate rose to 4.3%, from 4.1% in June, marking an unexpected deterioration in a labor market that had held up surprisingly well during the Federal Reserve’s aggressive rate-hike campaign in 2022 and 2023.On Wednesday, when U.S. central bankers opted to keep the central bank’s policy rate in its current 5.25%-5.50% range, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said he believed the labor market was in a process of “ongoing, gradual normalization” that allows policymakers to wait a little longer to be sure inflation is beaten before cutting rates.”If Powell knew then what he knows now, he probably would have cut rates,” said Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management. “By keeping rates on hold while inflation fell, they’ve applied too much pressure on the brakes.”The data prompted traders to pile into bets that the Fed will deliver a half-percentage-point rate cut at its Sept. 17-18 meeting, and drive borrowing costs down further from there, with the policy rate expected to end 2024 in the 4.00%-4.25% range.Analysts at many Wall Street banks tore up their forecasts and wrote new ones. Goldman Sachs, for example, now sees a steady every-meeting series of Fed rate cuts and Citi called for half-percentage-point cuts in both September and December. JP Morgan said there was a strong case for a cut even before the Fed’s next meeting.”I would not like to see material further cooling in the labor market,” Powell told reporters on Wednesday. “If we see something that looks like a more significant downturn, that would be something that we would … have the intention of responding to.”Before the release of Friday’s employment report, rate futures had been priced for quarter-percentage-point rate cuts starting in September.”This week’s Fed inaction was a mistake; the case for 50 basis points in September is strong,” Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, wrote. “July’s poor employment report leaves the Fed looking woefully behind the curve.”Speaking after the jobs data was released, Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee said the central bank should not overreact to a single month of data, but also repeated his warning that leaving the policy rate where it is even as inflation falls means making an already restrictive policy even more so.”Our absolute goal now is we want to settle at something like full employment, not blow through normal and deteriorate,” he told Bloomberg TV.SAHM RULEAnalysts noted that some of the underlying data was not as weak as the headline numbers suggested. Workforce growth was substantial, with the labor force participation rate ticking up to 62.7% from 62.6%, and participation among prime-age workers hitting 84%, its highest level in more than 20 years.And while the Bureau of Labor Statistics said there was no impact on the data from Hurricane Beryl, many were skeptical, noting that the number of people who reported they were unable to work due to weather rose to a July record of 436,000.That, along with the fact that fewer businesses than usual responded to the monthly jobs survey, raises the likelihood that some of the weakness will be revised away in future reports, analysts said.The rise in the jobless rate last month triggered the so-called Sahm rule, a historically accurate early indicator of recession that says such a downturn is underway when the three-month moving average of the unemployment rate rises half a percentage point above its low from the previous 12 months.Claudia Sahm, an economist who worked at the Fed, has cautioned against taking too much of a signal from her rule, given the labor market disruptions of the COVID-19 pandemic. Powell this week called it a “statistical regularity” that did not mean a recession “must happen.”Even so, the increase has ignited concern that the Fed may have waited too long to cut rates, and will need to play catch-up with large cuts in borrowing costs to cushion the economy.In June, U.S. central bank policymakers in their quarterly projections anticipated only one cut this year, and saw the unemployment rate ending the year at 4%.With the jobless rate now well above that, “the soft landing in the U.S. labor market is in danger,” wrote Nick Bunker, director of North American economic research at Indeed Hiring Lab, referring to a scenario in which inflation is tamed without a painful recession or sharp rise in unemployment.Powell on Wednesday said policymakers were not currently considering a half-percentage-point cut in September.”What we think we’re seeing is a normalizing labor market and we’re watching carefully to see if it turns out to be more,” he said, adding that the Fed was “well-positioned to respond” if it started seeing signs that there was something more going on. 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    Central bank policy is becoming increasingly idiosyncratic

    Standard DigitalWeekend Print + Standard Digitalwasnow $85 per monthBilled Quarterly at $199. Complete digital access plus the FT newspaper delivered Monday-Saturday.What’s included Global news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print editionWeekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts10 monthly gift articles to shareGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print editionEverything in PrintWeekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysisPlusEverything in Premium DigitalEverything in Standard DigitalGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresFirstFT newsletterVideos & PodcastsFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit app10 gift articles per monthExclusive FT analysisPremium newslettersFT Digital Edition10 additional gift articles per monthMake and share highlightsFT WorkspaceMarkets data widgetSubscription ManagerWorkflow integrationsOccasional readers go freeVolume discountFT Weekend Print deliveryPlusEverything in Standard DigitalFT Weekend Print deliveryPlusEverything in Premium Digital More

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    Mythical Games brings 3.3M transactions to Polkadot in a single day

    The move also brings over 750,000 active wallets from the Mythos Chain, along with a user base of over 5 million, to Polkadot. With Mythos joining Polkadot, the ecosystem instantly becomes one of the largest blockchain ecosystems for gaming. Moreover, Mythos’s migration paves the way for other projects, both in gaming and beyond, to capitalize on the benefits of Polkadot.According to DotLake statistics, Mythos was behind 3.3 million transactions last Tuesday, a huge leap from under 500,000 the day before. This surge was mainly due to the transfer of non-fungible tokens (NFTs) from Mythos. However, transactions across Polkadot’s ecosystem dropped to 690,000 a day later, with 190,000 still coming from Mythos.Mythical Games also launched its Mythos ecosystem on Polkadot. This decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) reduces barriers to entry for game developers, allowing them to leverage Polkadot’s technology and community to build their own chains.Mythical Games, known for its party games and flagship game Blankos Block Party, boasts over 3 million monthly digital asset transactions. With 200,000 active wallets engaging in more than 1 million in-game trades using over 1 million native MYTH tokens daily.John Linden, founder and CEO of Mythical Games, said the decision to migrate from Ethereum to Polkadot was influenced by several issues with the Ethereum ecosystem. Even with L2 Rollups, slow transaction speeds could hinder Mythical Games’ expansion plans. Furthermore, establishing a security and governance infrastructure with full interoperability with other Mythos ecosystem partners was crucial.Thanks to Polkadot’s flexible EVM module, the Mythos Chain will keep its EVM address compatibility and let builders take full advantage of the WebAssembly-based Substrate framework. This shift will unlock a wide range of technical possibilities for creating the next wave of mainstream applications on Polkadot. As part of this migration, Mythos will also benefit from Polkadot’s advanced cross-chain features, including native XCM and decentralized bridges like Snowbridge. More