Economists said October’s payrolls report showed all-around strength, highlighting wages climbing 3.1% in the past 12 months as they called the data consistent with further tightening by the Federal Reserve.

Read more about the jobs data from MarketWatch.

• “In one line: Solid across the board, though hard to read the trends behind the weather noise.” — Ian Shepherdson, chief economist, Pantheon Macroeconomics

• Jason Furman, who ran the Council of Economic Advisers under President Barack Obama, said he didn’t see anything bad in the October numbers, citing strong wage growth and a bounce-back in job growth from last month.

Also read:Trump complaints or not, Fed December interest-rate hike looks like ‘done deal’ after strong jobs report.

• Martha Gimbel, the research director at Indeed.com, summed up the headline number in one word: “wow.”

• “Overall, a higher than expected gain in jobs and annual wage increase above 3% should be positive for the [dollar] DXY, +0.31% and negative for fixed income TMUBMUSD02Y, 0.136% .” — Andrew Grantham, CIBC Economics

• AFL-CIO chief economist William Spriggs said the three highest-paying industries had slower job growth than the low-wage and fast-growing leisure and hospitality sector.

• Jared Bernstein, who was former Vice President Joe Biden’s economic adviser, said the data showed “pretty much everything you could want in a monthly jobs report.”

• RSM chief economist Joseph Brusuelas said the data “just about guarantees” a December interest-rate hike by the Federal Reserve.

• “The upward trajectory seen in the wage data over the last few months is a good sign that the tight labor-market conditions are finally generating meaningful wage pressures in the economy.” — Bank of America Merrill Lynch Global Research