Sunday, July 5, 2026

June Employment Not Soft Enough, But Market Relief Ahead

The stock market may continue this week to be concerned about the possibility of a Fed rate hike at the next FOMC Meeting, with the Minutes of the June 16-17 FOMC Meeting the focus.  The Minutes should emphasize the need to bring down inflation, but the market could find relief if they show many participants still expecting inflation to slow on its own.  The market soon may get relief from a couple of other sources.  The Q226 corporate earnings season is expected to be strong.  And, the June CPI, due July 14, may very well be soft.  

The June Employment Report was not likely soft enough to derail the possibility of a Fed rate hike (or a hint of one at a coming meeting) at the July 28-29 FOMC Meeting.  The 59k increase in Nonfarm Payrolls is consistent with population growth, cited by Fed Chair Warsh as a reason to think the labor market is in good shape.  Moreover, the Unemployment Rate fell to 4.2% from 4.3%.  A drop in the Labor Force more than offset lower Civilian Employment.  However, the declines in both may be largely a result of the small sample bias of the Household Survey.  The calculation of the Unemployment Rate eliminates this bias.

A closer look at Payrolls shows a somewhat stronger picture than seen in the headlines.  Excluding the unusual volatility in Leisure and Hospitality jobs, Payrolls would have risen 118k m/m in June after +89k in May (official data: +57k in June after +129k in May).  However, once again job gains were concentrated in only a couple of sectors -- Health and Private Education and Professional and Business Services.  That said, the Report points to modest economic growth ahead.  Total Hours Worked in June were only 0.3% (annualized) above the Q226 average -- a soft take-off point for Q326.  Similar m/m THW gains as in June would put the THW average up 1.0% (q/q, saar) in Q326, versus +1.3% in Q226.  

Corporate earnings are expected to be strong in Q226.  Consensus looks for a whopping 23% y/y increase in S&P 500 corporate earnings.   This is close to the even greater 28.4% growth seen in Q126.  The macroeconomic evidence is mixed, but is positive on balance.  On the downside, Real GDP Growth and European Mfg PMI slowed on a y/y basis from Q126.  Also, the softer dollar provided a smaller boost to earnings abroad than in Q126.  On the positive side, oil company earnings should be helped by higher oil prices by even more than in the prior quarter.  And, profit margins may have expanded, as the Core CPI sped up while Average Hourly Earnings slowed.  

                                                                                                                                        Euro  Area   

                  Real GDP     Oil Prices      Trade-Weighted Dollar    AHE     Core CPI    Mfg PMI  

                     [                y/y percent change                                                            ]          (level)

Q424             2.5               0.0                      +3.5                               4.1           3.4               45.4       
 
 Q125            2.1              -6.5                      +6.0                               4.1           3.1               47.6                                       
Q225            2.0             -16.0                      +3.5                               3.9           2.8               49.3     
 
Q325            2.3              -11.0                      -1.5                               3.9           3.1               50.0  
 
Q425            2.0              -14.0                      -4.0                                3.9           2.6               53.3  
 
Q126            2.7               40.0                       -8.0                               3.6           2.5                50.6     
 
Q226            2.0 *            75.0                       -4.0                               3.5           2.8                51.7                                                                  
                                                                           
* Based on the Atlanta Fed Model's latest projection of 1.2% for Q226 (q/q, saar).


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