With US jobs data now in the rear-view mirror, the market’s focus this week shifts to US President Donald Trump’s self-imposed reciprocal tariff deadline on 9 July.
US Jobs report likely enough to keep the Fed at bay
Although the US dollar (USD) Index concluded another week on the back foot, it managed to recover from its worst levels, helped by Thursday’s jobs data, which showed that the US economy added 147,000 new payrolls in June (consensus: 110,000). US equities also caught a bid on the back of the upbeat jobs data, with the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq refreshing all-time highs. While the USD is overstretched to the downside in terms of COT data (Commitment of Traders) and despite the USD Index recently shaking hands with what I would consider a heavyweight long-term channel support, taken from the low of 72.70, optimism for the buck appears lacking amid Trump’s impending tariff deadline.
The USD’s reaction to Thursday’s blowout June jobs report initially caught me off guard. I expected greater follow-through upside amid the headline number surpassing the market’s median estimate and the unofficial ‘whisper number’ of around 96,000. Even though the buck did rally 0.5% in the immediate aftermath, gains were swiftly pared to end the week just north of pre-announcement levels.
However, if you look beneath the surface of the jobs data, a large portion of the job gains in the headline figure originated from government employment, which increased by 73,000; gains were especially notable in education (40,000). Private sector roles, nevertheless, grew at their slowest pace since late last year, with an increase of 74,000. This was down from 140,000 in May and considerably lower than the consensus estimate of 105,000. As a result, this indicates that hiring is slowing but not collapsing, and remains robust enough to give US Federal Reserve (Fed) members confidence to keep the rate unchanged later this month. The minutes of the Fed’s latest policy decision this week, announced on Wednesday, will also be closely eyed for any additional clues regarding future rate cuts.
Regarding when the Fed may pull the trigger and lower rates, markets have their eye on September’s meeting, with 19 basis points (bps) worth of cuts priced in and 56 bps for the year, consistent with the Fed’s latest projections. However, I think that softer inflation prints this month could push markets to lean more dovish on rates and potentially fully price in a cut for September.
This month welcomes June CPI data (Consumer Price Index) on 15 July, PPI data (Producer Price Index) on 16 July, and PCE numbers (Personal Consumption Expenditure) at the tail end of the month. Note that across all three key measures, we saw price pressures modestly tick higher in May on a year-on-year basis. And what could further drive prices higher are tariffs, with this week’s impending deadline possibly influencing this.