Since March, traders focused on oil
Where every explosion could roil
The bulls and the bears
In bonds and in shares
While data, in secret, would toil
Today, though, the payroll report
Is taking bows on center court
For those who are long
The buck, they need strong
Results, while a weak one helps short(s)
For a change of pace today, the market truly seems to be looking at the data release rather than the latest zig or zag in Iran. It has been at least four months, since before the first bombs dropped in March, that this data point has had any real import for the narrative, so it is a welcome return to what we used to consider normal. With that in mind, let’s look at what the current expectations are:
| Nonfarm Payrolls | 85K |
| Private Payrolls | 85K |
| Manufacturing Payrolls | 2K |
| Unemployment Rate | 4.3% |
| Average Hourly Earnings | 0.3% (3.4% Y/Y) |
| Average Weekly Hours | 34.3 |
| Participation Rate | 61.7% |
Source: tradingeconomics.com
While 85K is much lower than the pre-Trump 2.0 level deemed necessary to maintain a strong labor market, it is abundantly clear that between the closure of the borders and the deportations, that is no longer the situation. Estimates I have seen to achieve labor stability have been between 0 and 50K, and that includes comments from former Fed Chair Powell. While an outturn at the forecast level would be lower than last month, it would still indicate the labor market is in decent condition. Of course, one of the hardest things is to see through the revision noise as the BLS birth/death model describing new companies is clearly not representative of the current economy. Below is a look at the past five years of monthly reports which is showing a clear trend lower, but as per the above, that may not be a problem.

Source: tradingeconomics.com
However, the other data we have seen lately, notably the strong ADP number, the solid employment subindices from the ISM data and the fact that claims data, although a touch higher yesterday, remains very contained, tells me that we are going to see a better number than forecast, something around 115K like last month.
Perhaps the real question is why this matters now. Well, as the war fades into the background, and remarkably that is what is happening, investors are back to looking for clues as to how the economy is performing and how the Fed is likely to behave going forward. Several times this week I have highlighted the importance of capital flows, and a key part of that story is central bank liquidity being available to flow. Thus, if the Fed sees this data and leans more toward tightening, that is likely to have a negative impact on those markets that require easy money like stocks, high-yield debt and private markets. Interestingly, if bond traders sense that the Fed is going to pay closer attention to inflation, that should help the long end of the bond market, and we could see a bull flattener result. Nothing has changed in the Fed funds futures market, but that is something that could really move on an outlier number here. We will learn soon enough.
Away from that, though, the most interesting thing I have seen is the below tweet although the commentary was strongly of the opinion that this is fake news. If it is real, that is a major breakthrough in leading to the end of the war, however, based on the fact that oil prices are essentially unchanged (-0.15%), the market does not appear to believe the story.

Ok, let’s see what else is happening in other markets. Not surprisingly, gold (-0.25%) is also not doing much but both silver (-1.7%) and copper (-1.6%) are softer despite the fact oil’s little changed. Metals appear to have lost some of their luster for now, but I do believe that their long-term prospects remain strong.
In the stock markets, yesterday saw the DJIA take the lead for a change, rallying to a new all-time high although the NASDAQ went nowhere as questions about the AI story are beginning to be raised. Too, semiconductor stocks, which have been extraordinarily strong, are beginning to be questioned given the highly cyclical nature of that business. Yesterday Harris Kupperman wrote a very interesting piece on semiconductors which I think is worth reading.
In the meantime, Asian markets followed the tech lead from NASDAQ and were virtually all lower, some extremely so. The worst case was Korea (-5.5%) followed by Indonesia (-4.2%) but the major indices all fell as well (Tokyo -1.3%, HK -1.15%, China -1.8%). Tech took a beating. Of course, for Europe, since they basically have no tech, markets are having a much better day with Spain (+1.1%) leading the way followed by France (+0.5%), the UK (+0.4%) and Germany (+0.2%). Perhaps the fact that Eurozone GDP for Q1 was revised down to -0.2% Q/Q and +0.3% Y/Y has some thinking the ECB may not (stupidly) raise rates due to the oil shock. But if that’s the case, you cannot tell by the interest rate markets which show the current probabilities as per the ECB itself.

At this hour (7:40) US futures are mixed with the NASDAQ (-0.9%) still suffering while the DJIA (+0.2%) continues to smile.
Apparently, global bond markets are collectively holding their breath ahead of the data point as yields are essentially unchanged in the US, Europe and were unchanged last night in Asia.
Finally, the dollar is slightly softer this morning, although remains above 99 on the DXY and is merely chopping back and forth within the extremely tight range of the past 3 weeks I show, once again, below.

Source: tradingeconomics.com
Most movement today across both the G10 and EMG blocs is +/-0.25% or less, hardly the sign of a trend. The one exception is INR (+0.8%) after the RBI left rates on hold, as expected, but instituted several measures to try to attract foreign capital such as easing investment rules for foreigners. We shall see if that has a long-term benefit, but at least the rupee has put a little space between the current level and the bottom (dollar top) seen two weeks ago.

Source: tradingeconomics.com
And that’s really all for today. So, absent news about real movement toward the end of the Iran conflict, it’s payrolls then a summer Friday where many will be seeking to leave early. If I am correct and we see a stronger number, I see the dollar benefitting which should hurt the metals, although oil is independent of this news. Since this would imply more chance of a Fed rate hike, I expect stocks would not be pleased, nor will bonds. We shall see.
Good luck and good weekend
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