Jobs In Focus as Market Trends Hold

Here’s how I see it going into a critical data week: the inflation gauges landed precisely on expectations while an ugly July trade gap shaves some growth from Q3, and that combination keeps the Fed on a path to cut 25 basis points at the next meeting.

I rarely see seven data points print exactly as expected, but that’s what happened with personal income, personal spending, real spending, and the core and headline PCE measures, month-over-month and year-over-year—no surprises and virtually no revisions.

Markets focused on the PCE prints, but the real curveball was trade: the July deficit widened to roughly $104 billion versus expectations near $90 billion, a meaningful drag on third quarter GDP tracking. That likely knocks a couple of tenths off nowcasts that had crept toward the high-2s, depending on inventories. Nevertheless, I have rarely seen such a dispersion in third quarter estimates: Goldman in the mid 1s, JPM in the mid 2s, and the St. Louis Fed actually raising their estimate to the mid 3s! And we are more than two thirds through the quarter.

The jobs report this Friday now carries outsize weight. Claims have ticked up a touch yet remain well behaved, and a payroll gain around 60–70k would be soft but not weak. Given where expectations sit, I judge a 25-basis point cut as a near certainty. Chair Powell would not head into the quiet period with market odds so lopsided for a cut if he wanted to steer traders the other way. What could catalyze a 50-basis point cut? A genuinely negative payroll number paired with a notable rise in unemployment.

Importantly, any CPI/PPI noise that can be traced to tariff pass-through should be discounted; Powell all but told you that is not the inflation the Fed is focused on. The labor market trajectory—wage growth, diffusion, hours—is the lever that could swing the size of the move.