The economic outlook is complicated. The most important figure of 2022 is not: Morning Brief

The U.S. economic outlook is complicated.

Friday's two key data points were no exception.

The December jobs report showed more jobs were created last month than expected, while the unemployment rate fell to its lowest level since 1969.

Some 90 minutes after this report, data on service sector activity from the Institute for Supply Management suggested recession is nigh.

The release of conflicting data on the state of the economy feels like a daily event for investors. We're not optimistic the coming weeks and months will change this state of play.

At the heart of this divide are expectations about the economy diverging from data about the reality in the economy.

And what's been happening is this: There were 4.5 million new jobs created in the U.S. economy last year.

To our minds, this is the most important economic figure of the year.

Going back to World War II, only 2021 has seen a better year for job creation. And the more people with gainful employment, the better the prospects for the economy.

But as Yahoo Finance's Alexandra Semenova reported earlier this week, there are plenty of concerning data points even in this record-setting labor market.

The tech industry, most notably, continues to greet investors with a flurry of announcements about planned staff cuts: 18,000 workers at Amazon (AMZN), 10% of Salesforce's (CRM) staff, and 13% of Meta's (META) team, to name a few.

Still, aggregate reads on the labor market could not paint a more different picture. Every month in 2022 witnessed headline job gains. And in each of the last nine months, job gains have been higher than forecast by economists, according to data from Bespoke Investment Group.

In other words, Wall Street has been too pessimistic about the labor market for most of the last year. And the headlines aren't exactly painting an optimistic picture, either.

But compared to February 2020, the last month before the economy was hit by the pandemic-induced recession, there are 1.2 million more people with jobs today. After completing its comeback from the pandemic in the summer, the labor market continues to improve past those pre-COVID highs.

Construction workers listen as U.S. President Joe Biden speaks about investments in infrastructure during a visit to the LA Metro, D Line (Purple) Extension Transit Project in Los Angeles, California, U.S., October 13, 2022.  REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Construction workers listen as U.S. President Joe Biden speaks about investments in infrastructure during a visit to the LA Metro, D Line (Purple) Extension Transit Project in Los Angeles, California, U.S., October 13, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque · Kevin Lamarque / reuters

Retorts that these data are backward-looking are chronologically accurate, but they hardly build an airtight case of an imminent recession.

Still, investors and economists remain steadfast that a downturn is in the offing.

For one thing, job gains continue each month, but the rate of increase is slowing. And investors are almost always more interested in the second derivative — the rate of change of the rate of change — in any data point, economic or otherwise.