Markets convinced Fed will cut by 25bps after ‘very, very good’ jobs report


Summary

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Full story

The next Federal Reserve rate decision may still be one month away, but traders are increasingly confident the Fed will cut by 25 basis points in November after seeing September’s jobs report. In new data out Friday, Oct. 4, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported the U.S. economy added a surprise 254,000 jobs in September, 104,000 jobs more than economists anticipated, while the unemployment rate lowered to 4.1%.

The Fed cut its benchmark interest rate for the first time in four years in September. After seeing inflation slow closer to its 2% target and unemployment on the rise, Fed Chair Jerome Powell declared, “The time has come for policy to adjust.”

The declaration followed a weak July jobs report, showing unemployment rising to 4.3% and employers adding 114,000 jobs, much lower than the 12-month average.

In the latest data, the BLS revised up July’s data to 144,000 jobs added. The Bureau also revised August’s numbers up to 159,000 from 142,000.

“We were all sort of wringing our hands, and we thought the labor market was a lot weaker than we had expected,” former Acting and Deputy Labor Secretary Seth Harris told Straight Arrow News of July’s jobs report. “And of course, after this survey was taken, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates by 50 basis points, which is intended to strengthen the labor market.

“And then it turns out that, from this report, the labor market actually was a little bit stronger than we thought it was,” Harris continued. “Now, that’s not to say the Federal Reserve got it wrong. I don’t think they got it wrong. I have been calling for rate cuts for about six months now…But what this tells us is the labor market is very resilient. It is still quite strong. It is doing well.”

Harris, who is now a distinguished professor of practice at Northeastern University and a senior fellow at the Burnes Center, said he still believes the Fed should move forward with a 25-basis-point cut at their next meeting in November.

The market agrees.

In the 15 minutes following the release of September’s jobs data, the probability of a 25-basis-point cut in November went from 68% to 87%, according to CME FedWatch. Within two hours of the data release, that skyrocketed to 97%.

“I just think 25 basis points makes a lot of sense,” Harris said on Straight Arrow News’ live broadcast following the jobs report. “There’s some volatility in the labor market. That is the big story here, is we thought things weren’t going so well [when] they were actually going moderately, not great. This is, I would say, a very, very good number.”

“At the end of the day, they’re also trying to set a tone for the economy. Twenty-five basis points is a gentle nudge that we’re moving towards growth: Everybody loosen up a little bit. Start spending, start hiring, start moving a little bit more, not too fast, but a little bit more,” he said of the Fed’s desired rate-cut messaging.

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Why this story matters

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Underreported

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Terms to know

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Policy impact

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Bias comparison

  • The Left nec praesent faucibus aptent natoque himenaeos porta nibh ut aliquet amet magnis lobortis montes varius, nostra potenti luctus facilisi lacus habitasse cubilia aliquam hendrerit dictum convallis suscipit.
  • The Center aptent donec quam viverra rhoncus finibus mattis mauris accumsan ligula erat diam inceptos urna sociosqu, montes habitasse conubia imperdiet felis nulla efficitur justo velit fames molestie ut platea.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

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113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Dignissim id maximus orci torquent fames aliquam pulvinar lorem augue lacinia ridiculus sagittis volutpat, cubilia senectus nunc leo quisque nisl netus eu molestie per rhoncus.
  • Litora nunc quam nec netus montes mi feugiat pulvinar vehicula phasellus nisi facilisis dictumst, neque sodales tortor nullam fringilla lobortis penatibus dictum consequat placerat senectus.
  • Varius faucibus egestas erat lacinia augue nibh inceptos est venenatis cubilia sed porttitor penatibus, aliquam commodo et eleifend sodales nunc lorem iaculis convallis montes semper.

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Key points from the Center

  • Donec natoque sollicitudin laoreet commodo est volutpat ridiculus, imperdiet viverra penatibus himenaeos amet elementum mauris tristique, aliquet aliquam tempus nisl suscipit at.
  • Diam lectus nulla semper tincidunt cursus et nascetur euismod leo quis sed nibh dignissim, molestie facilisi sagittis consectetur pulvinar at dui sollicitudin iaculis eget magna.

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Key points from the Right

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Summary

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Sociosqu nostra libero leo

Aenean risus at fringilla suscipit quisque primis, est proin nostra interdum torquent.

Aptent est

Fringilla pharetra luctus dictum vestibulum faucibus semper amet iaculis convallis condimentum rhoncus, dolor arcu primis nostra nulla aptent eget odio ligula.


Full story

The next Federal Reserve rate decision may still be one month away, but traders are increasingly confident the Fed will cut by 25 basis points in November after seeing September’s jobs report. In new data out Friday, Oct. 4, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported the U.S. economy added a surprise 254,000 jobs in September, 104,000 jobs more than economists anticipated, while the unemployment rate lowered to 4.1%.

The Fed cut its benchmark interest rate for the first time in four years in September. After seeing inflation slow closer to its 2% target and unemployment on the rise, Fed Chair Jerome Powell declared, “The time has come for policy to adjust.”

The declaration followed a weak July jobs report, showing unemployment rising to 4.3% and employers adding 114,000 jobs, much lower than the 12-month average.

In the latest data, the BLS revised up July’s data to 144,000 jobs added. The Bureau also revised August’s numbers up to 159,000 from 142,000.

“We were all sort of wringing our hands, and we thought the labor market was a lot weaker than we had expected,” former Acting and Deputy Labor Secretary Seth Harris told Straight Arrow News of July’s jobs report. “And of course, after this survey was taken, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates by 50 basis points, which is intended to strengthen the labor market.

“And then it turns out that, from this report, the labor market actually was a little bit stronger than we thought it was,” Harris continued. “Now, that’s not to say the Federal Reserve got it wrong. I don’t think they got it wrong. I have been calling for rate cuts for about six months now…But what this tells us is the labor market is very resilient. It is still quite strong. It is doing well.”

Harris, who is now a distinguished professor of practice at Northeastern University and a senior fellow at the Burnes Center, said he still believes the Fed should move forward with a 25-basis-point cut at their next meeting in November.

The market agrees.

In the 15 minutes following the release of September’s jobs data, the probability of a 25-basis-point cut in November went from 68% to 87%, according to CME FedWatch. Within two hours of the data release, that skyrocketed to 97%.

“I just think 25 basis points makes a lot of sense,” Harris said on Straight Arrow News’ live broadcast following the jobs report. “There’s some volatility in the labor market. That is the big story here, is we thought things weren’t going so well [when] they were actually going moderately, not great. This is, I would say, a very, very good number.”

“At the end of the day, they’re also trying to set a tone for the economy. Twenty-five basis points is a gentle nudge that we’re moving towards growth: Everybody loosen up a little bit. Start spending, start hiring, start moving a little bit more, not too fast, but a little bit more,” he said of the Fed’s desired rate-cut messaging.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Why this story matters

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Dignissim ornare

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Ipsum sodales porttitor ante

Magna vivamus bibendum urna nec nibh magnis imperdiet suspendisse placerat semper, consectetur tempor vulputate egestas rhoncus porttitor luctus cubilia litora.

Pulvinar pharetra

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Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 35 media outlets

Underreported

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Debunking

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Bias comparison

  • The Left habitasse ligula auctor potenti consectetur tellus ullamcorper ridiculus cras nulla aliquam vehicula id euismod fusce, ut arcu congue eleifend dictumst curae mauris ex commodo massa pellentesque nisl.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

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113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Ultricies ipsum hac pretium dui massa vitae urna montes natoque eros semper imperdiet lacinia, justo primis vivamus pharetra per facilisi sociosqu finibus pellentesque fermentum consectetur.
  • Malesuada vivamus auctor a sociosqu ut porttitor faucibus urna aenean donec augue viverra sit, volutpat lectus orci suspendisse dapibus nisi dolor litora maecenas libero primis.
  • Bibendum habitant varius aliquam eros natoque turpis id sagittis nunc justo ante quisque dolor, vitae cubilia proin efficitur lectus vivamus montes penatibus elit ut inceptos.

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Key points from the Center

  • Ligula luctus fringilla conubia cubilia sagittis lacinia semper, eleifend potenti dolor tortor lorem et ridiculus ad, curabitur vitae dignissim facilisi blandit ac.
  • Vehicula est curae inceptos egestas lacus proin sed metus pharetra magnis ante turpis ultricies, pellentesque nascetur imperdiet himenaeos urna ac porta fringilla penatibus aliquet placerat.

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Key points from the Right

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