The latest data released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that nonfarm payroll employment increased by 130,000 in January, far exceeding the market expectation of 70,000, while the unemployment rate simultaneously fell to 4.3%. This seemingly robust employment data, however, is like a pebble thrown into a calm lake, stirring ripples in the financial markets—market expectations for the Federal Reserve's first interest rate cut have been significantly postponed from June to July, and the probability of a rate cut in March has plummeted to around 6%. This data-driven adjustment in expectations exposes deep structural contradictions between U.S. economic policy and market logic, and the economic dilemmas reflected behind it warrant in-depth analysis.
From the perspective of structural imbalances in the job market, the "quality" of the new jobs added is far lower than the optimistic picture painted by the "quantity." Of the 130,000 new jobs added, low-wage industries such as education and health services, leisure and hospitality accounted for over 60%, while manufacturing employment contracted for the third consecutive month, and information industry employment experienced its largest decline since April 2020. This employment structure, characterized by "services alone thriving while manufacturing remains persistently weak," is essentially the combined result of inflationary pressures on the consumption side and cost pressures on the production side. When low-income groups increase consumption due to improved employment, enterprises curtail investment due to rising production costs. This contradiction directly leads to a mismatch between aggregate economic demand and aggregate supply, forming a paradox of "improving employment data but sluggish economic growth."
The repeated swings in monetary policy expectations reveal the inherent flaws in the Federal Reserve's "data-dependent" framework. Market judgments on the timing of rate cuts have shifted from a "March cut" in December 2023 to a "June cut" in January 2024, and now to a "July cut." This sharp volatility in expectations does not stem from fundamental changes in the economic fundamentals, but rather from the Fed's wavering policy signals between its inflation and employment mandates. When employment data improve slightly, rate cut expectations are immediately tightened; when inflation data edge down, dovish signals are released. This "muddling through" decision-making model not only exacerbates financial market volatility but also mires the real economy in a quagmire of "policy uncertainty." Enterprises dare not expand investment, consumers dare not increase spending, ultimately forming a vicious cycle of "self-fulfilling expectations"—the more hesitant the policy, the less certainty the economy has, and the more the market demands policy stability.
The overreaction of financial markets highlights the severe decoupling between asset prices and the real economy. Following the release of the employment data, the U.S. dollar index rose 0.8% in a single day, the 10-year Treasury yield broke through 4.2%, and all three major U.S. stock indices closed lower. This anomalous phenomenon of "good data = bad market" is essentially the market's excessive pricing of expectations for "tight monetary policy." When investors postpone their expectations for a rate cut from June to July, they are effectively discounting current asset values based on "higher interest rates for a longer period in the future." Implicit in this logic is a concern about an economic "hard landing." More worrisome is that this financial market reaction could form a negative feedback loop through the "expectations channel"—falling asset prices lead to higher corporate financing costs, thereby suppressing investment and employment, ultimately rendering the originally "strong" employment data unsustainable.
From a broader macroeconomic perspective, the U.S. economy is falling into a "high-interest rate trap." With the federal funds rate maintained in a high range of 5.25%-5.5%, corporate debt burdens continue to worsen, household consumption capacity is constrained by declining savings rates, and government debt interest payments as a proportion of fiscal revenue have exceeded 12%. Under this "triple pressure," the temporary improvement in the job market increasingly resembles the economy's last leap at the edge of the "high-interest rate cliff." When the market postpones rate cut expectations to July, it is effectively acknowledging that the Federal Reserve faces an increasingly difficult trade-off between "controlling inflation" and "preventing recession," and the cost of this trade-off may be a prolonged period of low or even negative economic growth.
The adjustment in rate cut expectations triggered by the U.S. January employment data is by no means a simple linear logic of "data improves, so rate cuts are delayed." It exposes deep-seated contradictions in the U.S. economy across multiple dimensions, including employment structure, policy framework, market reaction, and macroeconomic balance. When the market digests "strong employment" by "delaying rate cuts," it may well signal that the U.S. economy is moving further away from a genuine "soft landing" and drawing closer to the risk of a "hard landing."
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