Why Falling Jobless Claims Are Reshaping Rate-Cut Expectations
Fresh U.S. labor market data delivered a surprise to markets, with weekly unemployment filings falling well below expectations and reinforcing the view that job conditions remain tight even as other parts of the economy show signs of cooling.
Initial claims for unemployment benefits fell to 198,000 in the week ending January 10, significantly under economists’ forecasts of around 215,000. Continuing claims also declined, coming in at 1.88 million for the prior week, slightly below expectations. Together, the figures suggest layoffs remain limited and displaced workers are finding new jobs relatively quickly.
The data, released by the U.S. Department of Labor, prompted an immediate reaction in bond markets. U.S. Treasury yields moved higher as traders dialed back bets on aggressive rate cuts in the first half of the year. A resilient labor market implies the economy can better tolerate restrictive policy, reducing urgency for the Federal Reserve to ease.
Officials and investors alike are increasingly cautious about declaring a clear slowdown. With hiring still firm and layoffs muted, the labor market continues to complicate the inflation outlook and keep markets highly sensitive to each new employment report.
Inflation data reinforces a cautious outlook
Recent inflation readings added another layer to the market’s reaction. The Consumer Price Index rose 0.3% in December on a monthly basis, lifting headline inflation to 2.7% year over year. Core inflation, which strips out food and energy, increased 0.2% on the month and 2.6% annually-its slowest yearly pace since early 2021, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Producer prices also pointed to lingering pressure. The Producer Price Index rose 0.2% in November, pushing annual wholesale inflation to 3%. Energy costs were a notable contributor, suggesting some upstream price pressures are still filtering through the economy.
Taken together, the strong labor data and only gradually easing inflation have reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates higher for longer. Markets are now assigning a low probability to an early rate cut, instead bracing for a more patient approach as policymakers weigh the risk of easing too soon against the goal of fully containing inflation.
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