Bonds simmer as payrolls offer reality check


A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan

After a torrid start to the year for U.S. Treasuries and global sovereign bonds at large, Friday tests the ‘hot economy’ thesis by revealing just how tight U.S. labor markets still are as a new administration takes office in Washington this month.

The release on Friday of the U.S. December employment report ties up a variety of jobs market updates this week – with something of a mixed picture so far.

The weekly jobless series released on Wednesday was a standout, as it indicated the lowest unemployment claims in eight months. November job openings also rose. 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 a decider on all the above, consensus expectations are for jobs growth to have softened overall in December to some 160,000 – with an unemployment rate steady at 4.2%.

If that pans out, the Federal Reserve will likely feel justified with a stance of further cautious rate cuts ahead. Its policymakers have indicated just two more quarter point reductions for this year, even though futures markets price marginally less than that – some 41 basis points as of Friday and with the first 25bp not coming until June.

On Thursday, the latest Fed speakers tilted hawkish.

Kansas City Federal Reserve President Jeff Schmid signaled a reluctance to cut interest rates again. “I believe we are near the point where the economy needs neither restriction nor support and that policy should be neutral,” Schmid said.

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

With Thursday’s market closures for the funeral of former President Jimmy Carter acting as something of a firebreak in an anxious first full trading week of the year, long-dated Treasury yields remain elevated ahead of the payrolls report.

At 4.94%, the 30-year ‘long bond’ yield is still stalking 5% for the first time since October 2023, while 10-year benchmark yields at 4.70% remain near this week’s 8-month highs.

Spurred in part by some extreme cold weather snaps across the Northern hemisphere, oil prices remain an aggravator and U.S. crude hit its highest since October.

The dollar index also remains pumped up near the two-year high set last week.

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


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