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Wall Street Reacts to Unexpected Jobs Report as Fed Meeting Looms

Markets showed mixed signals following the release of employment data that exceeded analyst expectations.

Marcus Chen

Published · Updated

1 min read

Friday's employment report blew past consensus estimates, adding 380,000 jobs against expectations of 215,000 and revising the prior two months upward by a combined 95,000. The unemployment rate held steady at 3.8 percent.

The market response was more nuanced than the headline beat would suggest. Equity indices sold off on the open as traders priced in a delayed Federal Reserve rate cut, then recovered through the morning as wage-growth data — slightly cooler than expected — softened the inflationary read.

Sector performance diverged sharply. Financials, which benefit from a higher-for-longer rate environment, outperformed. Rate-sensitive sectors like real estate and utilities lagged. The yield on the ten-year Treasury rose nine basis points, the largest single-session move in six weeks.

Attention now turns to next week's Fed meeting. While market-implied odds of a near-term rate cut have fallen sharply, most analysts still expect at least one cut before year-end given the trajectory of core inflation.

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