"This is certainly a positive in front of non-farm payrolls and further supports the view that the US economy is creating more jobs with the prospect for a lower unemployment rate. Perhaps we can break below 8 per cent by year end," said Michael Woolfolk, senior currency strategist at BNY Mellon.
"The labor market remains on a modestly improving trajectory," said Richard DeKaser, deputy chief economist at Parthenon Group Inc. in Boston. "We are starting to move to the next phase of the labor market expansion, where hiring will increasingly overshadow layoffs."