WALL STREET Report of job growth reassures investors



Most economists want to see several more months of growth.
NEW YORK (AP) -- The striking jump in the number of jobs created last month provided Wall Street traders with some long-awaited reassurance that the economic recovery is sound. But it also stirred apprehensions about rising interest rates.
The Labor Department's report Friday that companies hired 308,000 new workers in March far exceeded the expectations of analysts. Magnifying the importance of the largest jobs advance in four years, readings for January and February were revised upward, bringing the monthly average for the first quarter to 171,000 new jobs.
Sustainable?
To economists, that figure is a lot closer to the sort of labor market growth they'd hope to see in a normal recovery. Most are looking for several months with 200,000 to 300,000 new jobs before they'll declare that the expansion is sustainable. With the latest increase, the last piece of the recovery puzzle finally seems to be falling into place.
"This number sets a very positive tone going into the [second] quarter," said Ken McCarthy, chief economist for vFinance Investments in New York. "The fact that companies are willing to hire means they have a lot of confidence that their profits are going to continue to rise."
The breadth of the employment increase was also encouraging. Jobs were added to nearly every sector of the economy, notably in construction, retail and health-care services. Additionally, manufacturing employment held steady -- a significant event after 44 months of declines.
Bond prices sagged on the report, and yields on the 10-year note flew to 4.14 percent.
Soaring stock prices
But stock prices soared as the data heightened anticipation among investors for first-quarter results, which companies will begin releasing this week. Some of the first profit reports will come from Dow 30 components Alcoa Inc. and General Electric Co., and dot-com bellwether Yahoo! Inc.
Analysts have estimated first-quarter earnings growth of 17 percent for the Standard & amp; Poor's 500. But Wall Street has grown increasingly anxious about future growth as consumer spending incentives -- such as tax cuts and mortgage refinancings -- start to fade and jobs remain scarce.
In the upcoming earnings season, corporate outlooks will be of great significance, said Jack Caffrey, equities strategist at J.P. Morgan Private Bank. Investors will want to hear conviction from corporate management that demand is on the rise.
"The question investors have really been asking over the last month is, What is next?" Caffrey said. "The more important issue is not what happened in the first quarter, but is what happened in the first quarter sustainable?"