Schwab Market Perspective: Connecting the Pieces

A softening job market has helped bring U.S. inflation down to 2.6%, close to the Federal Reserve's 2% goal. This supports potential Fed interest rate cuts as soon as this fall; however, it's important that job weakness not lead to outright economic deterioration. In the Treasury market, expectations for the timing of a rate cut versus concerns about the U.S. government's ongoing expansive fiscal policy have kept yields bobbing up and down. Meanwhile, the surprising outcomes of elections in the U.K. and France have potential implications for markets, especially for the Energy sector.

U.S. stocks and economy: Normalization or deterioration?

Despite several supply shocks and an aggressive rate-hiking campaign by the Federal Reserve over the past several years, the U.S. labor market has remained relatively resilient since the post-pandemic recovery began. The sharp rebound in payroll growth, coupled with soaring demand for labor on the part of companies, helped drive the market to an incredibly tight position. That in turn was consistent with strong wage growth and a surge in inflation.

Fortunately, inflation has continued to trend lower as the labor market's tightness has unwound. That has largely happened without major general, or "headline," damage, but much of the real story is being told below the surface. As shown below, even though nonfarm payroll growth is still in healthy territory when it comes to growth over the past year, full-time employment (measured via the household survey) is contracting. It's unusual to see a spread this wide between both series, but key to keep in mind is that they measure different populations, the household survey tends to be more volatile, and nonfarm payrolls are subject to revisions in the future.

Battle of labor data

Battle of labor data

Source: Charles Schwab, Bloomberg, Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS),as of 6/30/2024.