1. Why we watch these two reports as traders and market participants?
Report | When it’s released | Why it matters |
---|---|---|
Jobs Report (average weekly pay, number of workers) | Early each month | Shows how much people earn and how many are employed. |
Personal Income & Spending (income, spending, savings) | End of each month | Reveals whether consumers are still opening their wallets. |
Because consumer spending makes up roughly two-thirds of America’s economy, these two reports are crucial for both markets and the Fed.
2. What the latest jobs data (May 25 release) tells us
- Paychecks are rising for all workers, including supervisors and non-supervisors.
- More people are working. Total employment is up about 2 percent from a year ago.
- With pay rising and more people employed, overall household income is still growing, even after accounting for inflation.
Translation: The Fed sees no emergency to slash rates—the labor market is strong enough to keep spending afloat.
3. But people don’t necessarily feel rich
- Year-over-year pay growth per person (about 1 percent) is much smaller than total payroll growth (over 2 percent).
- Consumers remember last year’s soft patch and worry that new import tariffs could drive prices up again.
- That combination makes shoppers cautious—they’ll buy mid-priced items or only replace what’s worn out.
4. A quick look at U.S. factory output
Industrial production indexes (2000 = 100)
Sector | 2000 | Dec 2019 | Apr 2025 | Take-away |
---|---|---|---|---|
Food & drink | 100 | 109 | 106 | Slightly above 2000, but down from the pre-COVID peak. |
Textiles | 100 | 43 | 35 | Long-term decline. |
Apparel | 100 | 18 | 15 | Even steeper slide. |
Plastics & rubber | 100 | 91 | 91 | Flat. |
Metals | 100 | 85 | 82 | till below 2000. |
Furniture | 100 | 68 | 54 | Down sharply since 2000. |
Big picture:
- Offshoring: Much U.S. manufacturing has moved abroad.
- Tariffs backfire: Broad import taxes can raise prices without boosting domestic jobs.
5. Implications for the Fed and markets
- No rush to cut rates: Strong jobs and income growth don’t justify an emergency rate cut.
- Tariff concerns: Higher import taxes could fuel inflation, reducing real incomes if rates stay high.
- Consumer caution: Spending continues, but savers are rebuilding buffers, which keeps equity gains in check.
- Supply-chain strain: Trade tensions risk inflating costs, denting exports and tax revenues.
- High public debt: Elevated debt levels constrain the Fed’s ability to cut rates without undermining bond demand.
Bottom line:
- Consumers remain the economy’s backbone—but they’re spending more cautiously.
- Inflation is no news, locked in with tariffs affecting domestic production costs, tax revenues, and GDP reduced,
- public debt at record highs – bond auctions must be attractive Fed Rates need to be high to bail out debt
- Expect steady, measured growth rather than a big boom, or stagflation, especially if tariff-driven inflation flares up.
- Equity rallies or sell-offs are likely to be muted until there’s greater clarity on trade policy and rate paths.