-Pantheon Macroeconomics
American employers posted the most open jobs in eight months in March, but total hiring slowed, sending mixed signals of the labour market. Job openings rose 2.7% to 5.76 million, the most since July, the Labor Department reported. That may suggest better hiring in the coming months. Yet hiring slowed to 5.3 million from 5.5 million. That indicates employers became more reluctant to fill open positions, due to slower economic growth from October through March. The decline in hiring echoes a pullback that was reported last week, when the official data showed net hiring slowed in April. Yet the increase in job openings suggests that job gains could pick up again in the coming months. Last week's non-farm payrolls report showed the world's biggest economy created the fewest number of jobs in seven months and Americans dropped out of the labour force, casting doubts on whether the Fed will hike interest rates before the end of the year. According to the Labor Department, non-farm payrolls rose by 160,000 jobs last month as construction employment barely climb and the retail sector shed jobs. That was the smallest gain since September and below the first-quarter average job growth of 200,000. Moreover, employers appeared to add 19,000 fewer jobs in February and March than previously estimated. While the unemployment remained unchanged at 5.0% it came at cost of people dropping out of the labour force. The share of Americans participating in the labour force dropped to 62.8% in April from 63.0% in March.