The hiring rate trending lower could be a sign of problems to come

A version of this post first appeared on TKer.co

The stock market climbed to all-time highs, with the S&P 500 setting a closing high of 5,762.48 on Monday. For the week, the S&P rose 0.2% to end at 5,751.07. The index is now up 20.6% year to date and up 60.4% from its October 12, 2022 closing low of 3,577.03.

On Friday, we learned the U.S. economy created a healthy 254,000 net new jobs in September. While the number confirms that the labor market isn’t falling apart, the pace of net job creation has cooled from levels seen earlier in this economic cycle.

One labor market indicator that’s been drawing more attention lately is the hiring rate. In addition to measuring those hired into newly created jobs, this metric also captures those hired into existing jobs vacated by quitters, fired workers, and others. It’s been trending lower, and it could be a sign of problems to come.

According to the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) report, employers hired 5.32 million workers in August. While hires far exceed the 1.61 million people laid off during the period, the hiring rate — the number of hires as a percentage of the employed workforce — has fallen to 3.1%, matching the lowest level of the current economic cycle.

As we’ve been discussing for a while, the layoff rate has remained depressed, trending at around 1%, which is below prepandemic levels. That’s a good thing.

But with labor market tailwinds fading, we should be at least a little wary about resting on the economy’s low layoff laurels.

“The hiring rate turns BEFORE layoffs,” Renaissance Macro’s Neil Dutta explained in a research note on Tuesday.

When you think about how well-managed companies operate, this makes sense.

Managers know that a hiring freeze isn’t great news

When the economic tides begin to go out, companies usually don’t go from hiring people one month to immediately sending workers to the unemployment office in the next month.

Unless you’re facing a major business or economic calamity, you probably don’t want to take a hatchet to the headcount. Because what if business activity quickly turns around and you need those workers?

For starters, companies can reduce or freeze hiring, which means not filling new job openings or backfilling roles vacated by former employees. It’s a relatively easy way to keep expenses contained.

If challenges persist, then layoffs could be the next option.

It’s worth mentioning that layoff activity does not need to increase for the unemployment rate to rise. Think about it. Even when the economy is booming, many people are getting laid off every month — but many will quickly go back to work if hiring activity is strong. If the same number of people get laid off into an economy with weakening hiring activity, then more jobseekers will not be able to get back to work, and unemployment rises.