Whiplashed Bond Traders Are Still Missing the Point

Dueling economic reports whiplashed bond markets on Friday — for all the wrong reasons.

At 8:30 a.m. in New York, a hotter-than-expected US payrolls report sent yields on Treasury notes significantly higher, as traders bet that labor market strength would delay interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve. About ninety minutes later, another report from the Institute for Supply Management seemed to send the opposite signal — that employment activity in the US service sector was contracting — and yields plunged. The series of events was a perfect encapsulation of two key lessons from the post-pandemic economy:

  • The month-to-month data is very, very noisy.
  • The bond market is still overly focused on labor market data (even though the Fed itself is laser focused on inflation, which has proved untethered from the unemployment rate).

Let’s start with Friday’s data. The market day began with a Bureau of Labor Statistics report showing nonfarm payrolls increased by 216,000, better than the 175,000 that forecasters surveyed by Bloomberg had expected. What’s more, a measure of labor market breadth showed that the gains were shared by a broader set of industries.

More Industries Adding Jobs