The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the U.S. labor market made broad-based gains in March as 162,000 jobs were added, the most since May of 2007, and the unemployment rate was unchanged at a still very high level of 9.7 percent.

While the increase in payrolls was well below the consensus estimate of 200,000, data for prior months was revised upward by a total of 56,000 as December’s decline of 20,000 turned into a gain of 14,000 and January’s loss of 36,000 improved to a loss of 14,000.

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Filling the Irish Bank Black Hole

They are in the process of nationalizing a large swath of the banking system in Ireland, a “bad bank” plan that has been praised by the IMF, and ECU chief economist Kit Juckes talks with Bloomberg’s Linzie Janis about what’s next.

Juckes notes: “Because the economy’s got worse on the back of their austerity package, the bad loan problem is getting worse and the black hole is getting bigger … If you can’t inflate your way out of a debt problem and you can’t default your way out of a debt problem, wow, how miserably unpleasant this is.”

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Not being much of a conspiracy theorist, last week’s hearing by the CFTC (Commodities Futures Trading Commission) on futures market trading for metals was a subject of some interest to me, but the news flow since that time has been rather remarkable – if for no other reason that none of the news seems to be flowing in the mainstream media.

In fact, a search at the Wall Street Journal on “Gensler” (CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler would surely be included in any report) produces only this one item from before the hearing.

You’d think that, if a news organization that normally finds time to report on the most arcane of financial market goings-on saw fit to publish a story before the hearing was held, they’d also figure it was worthwhile to let their readers know what happened at the hearing.

Apparently not.

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ISM Manufacturing Index Expands Again

The Institute for Supply Management reported that manufacturing in the U.S. expanded for the eighth straight month, the nation’s broadest measure of this activity coming in well above expectations, up from 56.5 in February to 59.6 in March, its highest level in almost six years. Note that, as shown below, the current expansion is now equal in length to the one back in 2002-2003 before manufacturing contracted again for most of the next year.

The new orders component, a key leading indicator, rose from 59.5 to 61.5 and production improved from 58.4 to 61.1, both indications that a slowdown is not imminent. Recall that readings above and below 50 indicate expansion and contraction, respectively.

Interestingly, the inventories component finally transitioned from de-stocking to re-stocking, surging from 47.3 to 55.3, a sign that manufacturing inventories are now growing again, the final major component in the index to make this switch.

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Sell in April and Go Away?

After the recent run-up in stocks and the seemingly inevitable conquest of the 11,000 mark on the Dow sometime in the days ahead, Mark Hulbert wonders whether this might be a good year to beat the “sell in May and go away” crowd in this report at MarketWatch.

According to a comprehensive review of its historical legitimacy that appeared in the December 2002 issue of the prestigious academic journal, American Economic Review, this pattern has existed historically in 36 of 37 countries studied. In each of those countries, average stock market returns from Halloween through May Day (the so-called “winter” months) were significantly higher than equity returns from May Day through Halloween (the “summer months”).

In fact, the study found, the summer months’ returns have averaged so much less than those of the winter months that almost all of the stock market’s long-term returns have been produced during the winter months. That implies that simply going to cash between May Day and Halloween will have only minor impact on long-term returns while dramatically reducing risk — a winning combination that would show up in a much improved risk-adjusted performance.

To be sure, the results of this study are based on long-term averages, and there have been many individual years in which the overall pattern did not hold up. Several exceptions came during the recent bear market, for example, when the winter months from November 2007 through April 2008, as well as from November 2008 through April 2009, saw the stock market buck the favorable seasonality and fall sharply.

He then goes on to talk about a couple of newsletters that he follows that have implemented a strategy based on this premise with varying results. Last year would have been a particularly bad year to do this as you’d have missed gains of more than 20 percent from mid-May to mid-October.

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