“Don’t fight the Fed” is a popular Wall St. adage for investors. The phrase was coined by well known investor Marty Zweig in 1970. At the time, Zweig explained the Federal Reserve policy enjoys a strong correlation in determining the stock market’s direction. Fast forward ~50 years and his theory has proven mostly correct.
Employment
Yields Rally on “Strong” Jobs Data
According to the BLS – we saw the strongest employment growth in 12 months alongside the fastest wage growth in 22 months (0.6% MoM). However, we also saw the lowest amount of weekly hours worked since 2010. Given the better than expect jobs gains and acceleration in wages (which remains well above the Fed’s objective) – it seems less likely the Fed can justify rate cuts in March. Probabilities for a cut in 2 months stand at 38%. This was above 70% just a month ago.
Jobs Data: Choose Your Narrative
Today we learned that December added 216K jobs. CNN reported it as a “red hot” print. Was it? From mine, the headline number offers us very little. For example, what I want to know is the following (a) where are the jobs are being added (e.g. public vs private sector and what sectors); (b) what are people being paid per hour (is it rising or falling?); (c) are people working longer hours (as part time work doesn’t pay a mortgage); and finally (d) what’s the prevailing trend (as one month’s data doesn’t account for much). The headline number doesn’t provide this detail – therefore we need to dig a little. My quick take – this report is weaker than what the headline suggests.