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Abstract:Jobs, hiring and unemployment numbers start to add up as market watchers weigh rate cut probabilities.
You may have had a hot summer but the nations labor market?
Not so much.
Its looking rather cool.
So cool, in fact, some economists and market watchers forecast a big change later this month when the Federal Reserve votes on the benchmark Federal Funds Rate.
This move could affect interest rates from auto loans and credit cards on Main Street to stock market expectations and risks on Wall Street.
The wide miss on the August employment report builds the potential for a Fed rate cut, but the question is still whether we get one or more before the end of the year, Chris Versace, the veteran trader and TheStreet Pro lead portfolio manager, said.
Next week's August [Consumer Price Index and Producer Price Index] figures could help clear up that picture.
How jobs influence the Feds dual mandate
Key signals for the Fed from the latest job reports
August jobs report shows labor market continues to cool
What top economists are saying about rate cuts
Former Fed Vice Chairman Roger Ferguson described the labor market as “cold” but not alarming.‘’
The August figures put an interest rate cut in place for discussion when the FOMC meets this month, Ferguson told CNBC.
But he stopped short of forecasting a timeline, noting that “theres more data to come.” The Consumer Price Index report will be released Sept. 10.
I think the Fed is in a very data-driven mode,‘’ Ferguson said.
Federal Reserve Bank of New York President John Williams, who is a voting member of the FOMC, said Sept. 4 that it would “become appropriate” to cut interest rates “over time” but didnt specify a timeline.
“Looking ahead, if progress on our dual-mandate goals continues as in my baseline forecast, I anticipate it will become appropriate to move interest rates toward a more neutral stance over time,” Williams said in prepared remarks.
The Fed faces a “delicate” balance when it comes to employment and inflation risks, he noted.
More Federal Reserve:
“The balancing here has moved some of the concerns around the employment mandate a little higher, and on the margin, on the inflation mandate a little bit lower,” Williams told reporters after his speech.
The day before, Fed Governor Christopher Waller had doubled down on his stance for a September rate cut of 0.25 percentage point followed by additional cuts over the next three to six months.
Waller repeated his assertion that tariff inflation appears to be transitory and less of a risk than the labor markets increasingly cool numbers.
Waller, reported to be a top candidate to replace Powell as chairman, dissented at the July FOMC meeting alongside Governor Michelle Bowman when the Fed opted to hold rates steady.
It was the first FOMC dissent during Powells term as chairman and in decades at the Fed.
Waller and Bowman, both Trump 1.0 appointees as is Powell, said signs of weakness in the labor market validated the need to cut the funds rate.
The weak August jobs report triggered speculation among some market watchers that the Fed might vote for a jumbo rate cut of 0.5 percentage point at the September FOMC meeting.
The widely respected CME Group FedWatch Tool reported a 16% probability of a half-point cut and a 84% likelihood of a quarter-point trim after the BLS data were released Sept. 5.
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