Better-than-expected non-farm payrolls often lead to the initial reaction of "economic weakening." But in the current macro environment, market interpretations might be more complex—because a slowdown in employment is actually one of the phenomena the Federal Reserve is pleased to see. Over the past year, what has most troubled the Fed isn't recession but "overheating": strong employment, rising wages, resilient consumption, making it difficult to bring down inflation. Weakening non-farm payrolls indicate that the labor market is beginning to loosen, which is a plus for curbing wage-driven inflation. From this perspective, it provides room for future policy shifts. The issue lies in the pace. If employment cools mildly, the market will interpret it as a continuation of a "soft landing"; but if it weakens significantly for several months, it could trigger concerns about slowing growth or even recession. Currently, the market fears not bad data but data slipping from "cooling" into "stalling." Therefore, weaker-than-expected non-farm payrolls are more like a recalibration of expectations. It reminds the market that the lagging effects of high interest rates are beginning to show. For risk assets, in the short term, it is a source of emotional volatility; in the medium term, it could be a prelude to improved liquidity. Macro trading is often counterintuitive—bad data doesn't necessarily mean a bad market. #小非农数据不及预期
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Job slowdown: bad news or "good news"?
Better-than-expected non-farm payrolls often lead to the initial reaction of "economic weakening." But in the current macro environment, market interpretations might be more complex—because a slowdown in employment is actually one of the phenomena the Federal Reserve is pleased to see.
Over the past year, what has most troubled the Fed isn't recession but "overheating": strong employment, rising wages, resilient consumption, making it difficult to bring down inflation. Weakening non-farm payrolls indicate that the labor market is beginning to loosen, which is a plus for curbing wage-driven inflation. From this perspective, it provides room for future policy shifts.
The issue lies in the pace. If employment cools mildly, the market will interpret it as a continuation of a "soft landing"; but if it weakens significantly for several months, it could trigger concerns about slowing growth or even recession. Currently, the market fears not bad data but data slipping from "cooling" into "stalling."
Therefore, weaker-than-expected non-farm payrolls are more like a recalibration of expectations. It reminds the market that the lagging effects of high interest rates are beginning to show. For risk assets, in the short term, it is a source of emotional volatility; in the medium term, it could be a prelude to improved liquidity.
Macro trading is often counterintuitive—bad data doesn't necessarily mean a bad market.
#小非农数据不及预期