Big Jobs Beat Mean Fed Will Be Very Slow to Make the Next Rate Cut
With signs that inflation is stubborn or even turning higher from the latest jobs data, the Federal Reserve's next moves are clear.
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The headlines look very strong.
Big beat (256,000 versus 165,000 expectations) on the Establishment data. The beat was all in private payrolls (which is very good). There were also downward revisions, but only 8,000 (not bad).
The unemployment rate drops to 4.1% (the Household survey added 478,000 – which catches up on some recent weak prints relative to the Establishment survey).
Annual earnings ticked down marginally, but hours worked remained the same — call it a “wash”?
I continue to believe that seasonal adjustment factors overstate data this time of the year (our main reason for thinking that we would get a strong report), but in any case, markets will have to react to this data.
With signs that inflation is stubborn, if not turning higher (in response to people buying goods ahead of potential tariffs, etc.), with limited hopes of containing the deficit, and a labor market, that at least officially, remains strong, the Fed will be very slow to make the next cut.
We have argued that the neutral rate may well be as high as 4% in this environment and see no reason to lower that.
The front end of the curve needs to continue to price in a slow Fed, that is almost done.
The long end of the curve needs to price in deficits, supply and the risk that foreign buyers don’t buy as much debt, as some may not like the rhetoric coming out of Washington, D.C. (a minor, maybe even trivial, issue at the moment, but one that bears watching).
Can stocks do well if 10s get into a 4.8% to 5% range? Possibly, but only if the belief that the market-positive plans of the new administration seem likely to get implemented on a timely basis. The jury is still out there. There are lots of reasons to still believe, but so much got priced in, that any doubt creeping in will impact stocks negatively.
I see 10s at 4.7% to 4.9% (and am starting to get an itchy trigger finger to buy long-dated bonds).
Equities should see a pull back, but this will be a “messy,” traders-oriented market, so we will likely add some equity risk on a dip of 2% or more (if we get that far today).
At the time of publication, Tchir had no positions in any securities mentioned.
