Rates Spark: Payrolls day, and it's potentially a big one for rates
We provocatively asked the question yesterday whether Chair Powell had seen the payrolls number ahead of time. We'll get some clue on Friday. The interesting thing about this report is, if it's strong, it would absolutely negate a chunk of the air of confidence that Chair Powell exuded at the FOMC press conference. We'd continue our march towards 5% on the 10yr yield, with Powell's words of comfort fading fast.
On the other hand, if it's particularly weak, for example the unemployment rate hitting 4% (vs 3.8% now), it would act to amplify Powell's relative confidence on a rate-cutting trajectory ahead. Remember, Chair Powell explicitly noted that a material weakening in the labour market could precipitate rate cuts even if inflation were to remain relatively sticky and moderately elevated (those weren't his words, but that's the translation). Here, the 10yr would have seen its highs already, at least on a multi-week perspective.
Something along the lines of the consensus estimates would be middle of the road. If we got that (payrolls at 240k, unemployment at 3.8% and average earnings at 4% year-on-year) we'd be left with the momentum economy narrative, one that keeps rates elevated for longer. It would leave the 10yr in the area of 4.6%, most probably with an ongoing bias to test higher next week, and to continue to do so until we get a ratchet down in inflation readings from the 0.3% / 0.4% month-on-month area to 0.2% (CPI is up on the week after next).