Jobs Report Yields Sigh of Relief

Last week’s employment report was an important stabilizer for the markets. After concerning revisions and weak ADP numbers raised recession alarms, Friday’s payrolls print calmed fears on labor market deterioration.

The net gain in jobs, while offset by downward revisions to prior months, was still enough to shift the narratives on a downward trajectory. The three-month moving average in job growth continues to hold steady, indicating we are not yet entering a broad-based labor contraction. Markets responded favorably, with stock prices rising and bond yields jumping as traders recalibrated pessimistic expectations.

Healthcare hiring once again led the charge, adding over 65,000 jobs—a sector that remains structurally robust even as questions persist about productivity. Also notable was the unexpected strength in the entertainment and leisure sectors, although some of that is likely seasonal. Wage growth was slightly above expectations, but not enough to spark inflation concerns. The broader unemployment metrics, including U-6, held steady, providing more evidence the labor market is cooling gradually, not collapsing. In short, the economy is decelerating, but in a controlled manner.

Investor sentiment also benefited from signals of progress—or at least a pause—in U.S.-China trade tensions. While the details of the Trump-Xi phone call remain sparse, the absence of acrimony was a positive sign. I continue to believe the market can digest tariffs of 10% across the board and 30% for China with limited sector-specific increases like aluminum at 50%.

With more aggressive tariff measures off the table at the moment, the equity rally is back to focusing on a forward earnings outlook driven by AI. AI spending remains strong, and although we’re seeing selective layoffs in tech, many of these firms are pruning bloated headcounts rather than reacting to a collapse in demand.