Wall Street Cheer a “Strong Jobs” Report…  Should They?

Wall St. cheered a perceived ‘strong’ monthly June jobs report. The economy added 206K jobs last month – however the unemployment rate moved to 4.1% – its highest level in 2 years. Here’s the thing: there was a lot of weakness in the labor market – with most of the jobs coming from government. In addition, April’s job gains were revised lower by 111K. And May was revised lower by almost 60K. I think there is material underlying weakness (reflected in slower Real GDP and PCE) and perhaps enough for the Fed to start cutting rates in September or November.

Rate Cut Hopes for 2024 Start to Fade 

Just as market participants were starting to get hopeful rate cuts could be coming – that door was slammed shut. Yields surged opposite a stronger-than-expected monthly payrolls number. Heading into the print – the market was looking for softness in the labor market – with maybe 190K jobs added. Recent data had suggested jobs were slowing – paving the way for the Fed to cut rates as early as July (with a 70% chance assigned to September). As it turns out, monthly job gains were said to be 272,000. That said, there are some ambiguities with the report – with the unemployment rate jumping to 4.0%. Is Sahm’s Rule about to trigger in the coming months?

Immigration’s Impact on Jobs

The headline will read 303K new jobs were added to the economy for the month of May. And on the surface, it gives the appearance of a very strong number. However, how many of these were full-time jobs? And where were the jobs being added? When we look into the details of the jobs report – it paints a very different picture. My take: the headline number is not as strong as some assume.

Don’t Fight the Fed…

“Don’t fight the Fed” is a popular Wall St. adage for investors. The phrase was coined by well known investor Marty Zweig in 1970. At the time, Zweig explained the Federal Reserve policy enjoys a strong correlation in determining the stock market’s direction. Fast forward ~50 years and his theory has proven mostly correct.

For a full list of posts from 2017…