KEY POINTS
  • Economists expect nonfarm payrolls for October to rise by 190,000 and the unemployment rate to hold at 3.7 percent.
  • More importantly, they are predicting that average hourly earnings rose 3.1 percent on a year-over-year basis, which would be the highest level since April 2009.
  • Such a move might stoke the inflation fears among the market that have resulted in two significant slides this year.
A Walmart location in Burbank, California.

October's nonfarm payrolls report Friday could bring some good news for the jobs market, which might be bad news for the stock market.

The Labor Department's count always gets a close watch on Wall Street for the pace of company hirings and the unemployment rate, which currently sits at its lowest level since 1969. However, the market may look past those two numbers and into a data point that has gotten an increasing amount of interest over the past several months.