US Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell holds a press conference in Washington, DC, on September 18.
Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
Friday’s shockingly robust?jobs?report for September shows the?Federal Reserve?may not need to deliver another supersized interest rate cut next month.
When the?Fed?slashed?rates?by half a point last month, the central bank’s leader, Jerome?Powell, said in a news conference that decision was aimed to protect the labor market’s strength, since?inflation?has seemingly come under control.
Some economists deemed that a so-called “insurance cut.” In addition to stabilizing prices, the?Fed?is also mandated by Congress to promote maximum?employment, and with price pressures now mostly tamed, central bankers are more focused on the health of America’s job market.
Since employers are still hiring at a solid pace and?unemployment?hasn’t continued to climb, after joblessness steadily picked up over the past year, that means?Fed?officials don’t need to take any more aggressive action to prevent the labor market from deteriorating. That just doesn’t seem to be happening at the moment, at least according to government data. A separate report out earlier this week showed that job openings unexpectedly rose in August, remaining above pre-pandemic levels.
“These results likely take a 50 basis point rate cut off the table for the?Fed’s next meeting in November, barring that next month’s?jobs?report isn’t a disaster,” Bret Kenwell, US investment analyst at eToro, wrote in a Friday note. “While one report doesn’t necessarily give investors the “all-clear” sign, it’s a huge step in the right direction and the September?jobs?report was certainly a statement.”
Some?Fed?officials had already said they preferred to cut?rates?more carefully moving forward — even before the release of the stunning September?jobs?report.
“After 50 basis points, we’re still in a net tight position so I was comfortable taking a larger first step,” Minneapolis?Fed?President Neel Kashkari told CNBC last week. “As we go forward, I expect, on balance, we will probably take smaller steps unless the data changes materially.”
Investors are overwhelmingly betting that the?Fed?will cut by a quarter point at its next policy meeting on November 6-7, according to the futures market.