Bonds simmer as payrolls offer reality check


A look at the day ahead in the US and global markets by Mike Dolan

After a torrid start to the year for US Treasuries and global sovereign bonds in general, Friday tests the “hot economy” thesis by revealing how far US labor markets remain being tightened when a new administration takes office in Washington this month.

Friday’s release of the December US jobs report ties in a variety of labor market updates this week, with a somewhat mixed picture so far.

The weekly unemployment series released on Wednesday was notable as it indicated the lowest jobless claims in eight months. Job openings in November also increased. But private sector payroll growth missed forecasts and Thursday saw data showing both hiring and layoffs slowed last month.

With the national payrolls report potentially decisive on all of the above, consensus expectations are for job growth to have softened broadly in December to around 160,000, with the jobless rate steady at 4, 2%

If this is achieved, it is likely that the Federal Reserve will feel justified in a stance of more cautious rate cuts. Its policymakers have indicated just two more quarter-point cuts for this year, though futures markets are pricing it marginally lower: about 41 basis points as of Friday and the first 25bp not due until June.

On Thursday, the Fed’s latest speakers took a hawkish slant.

Kansas City Federal Reserve President Jeff Schmid expressed reluctance to cut interest rates again. “I think we are close to the point where the economy needs neither restrictions nor support and this policy should be neutral,” Schmid said.

Fed Governor and known hawk Michelle Bowman said she supported last month’s interest rate cut as the “final step” in recalibrating the central bank’s monetary policy.

With Thursday’s market closures for former President Jimmy Carter’s funeral putting a damper on an anxious first full trading week of the year, long-term Treasury yields remain elevated ahead of the payrolls report.

At 4.94%, the 30-year “long bond” yield is still just shy of 5% for the first time since October 2023, while benchmark 10-year yields at 4.70 % remain near this week’s eight-month highs.

Fueled in part by some extreme cold storms in the Northern Hemisphere, oil prices remain a drag and US crude hit its highest since October.

The dollar index also remains near a two-year high set last week.

With Wall Street closed Thursday, futures are slightly in the red ahead of Friday’s reopening.



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