Phase 10 // Course Syllabus Chapter

Employment Data — Trading NFP, UK Claimant Count, and ADP.

Part of our masterclass path. We systematically cover risk, logic, and mechanics to build professional edge.

Edge Tier Access 20 min read / 12 min video
01_Curriculum_Brief

What is covered in this chapter

Trading Labor Market Volatility

A central bank's mandate is rarely just inflation; it almost always includes maximizing employment. Therefore, employment releases are major market catalysts. The most famous of these is the U.S. Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP), released on the first Friday of every month. It is notorious for triggering extreme volatility, clearing out retail stop-losses in seconds.

The Gold Rule: We do not gamble on the NFP release. We do not place buy or sell stop orders right before the release hoping to catch the spike. We wait for the data to drop, let the institutional desks digest the numbers, and trade the subsequent structural trend.

The Employment Indicators

To understand the health of the labor market, you must track multiple data points:

  • NFP (Non-Farm Payrolls): The net change in the number of jobs created in the U.S. during the previous month, excluding the farming sector.
  • Average Hourly Earnings: Measures wage inflation. Even if job creation is strong, weak wage growth can prevent a central bank from raising interest rates.
  • Unemployment Rate: The percentage of the total labor force that is unemployed and actively seeking employment.
  • UK Claimant Count: The UK equivalent, tracking the number of people claiming unemployment-related benefits.
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