Investors are awaiting the June US employment report, released a day early ahead of the July 4 holiday, after soft private hiring data and cautious remarks from Fed Chair Kevin Warsh at a central banking forum in Portugal.
Markets are focused on the June US employment report, released on July 2 rather than its usual Friday slot because of the Independence Day holiday. Expectations point to moderate job growth of roughly 100,000 to 115,000 positions and an unemployment rate around 4.3%, a step down from May's stronger reading. Ahead of the release, a private-sector payrolls estimate showed companies added about 98,000 jobs in June, modestly below forecasts and adding to signs of a cooling but not collapsing labor market. The data lands as new Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh took the stage at the European Central Bank's annual symposium in Portugal, where he said the inflation outlook had improved but declined to commit to whether the Fed should raise rates. At its June meeting the Fed held its benchmark rate at 3.50% to 3.75% while signalling a more hawkish tilt, with projections pointing to a possible hike later in the year. A firm jobs report would likely reinforce that bias, while clear weakness could reopen debate over the path ahead.
Key Points
- 1The June US jobs report was released July 2, a day early because of the July 4 holiday.
- 2Private payrolls rose about 98,000 in June, pointing to cooler hiring.
- 3Fed Chair Kevin Warsh said the inflation outlook had improved but was non-committal on rate hikes.
- 4The Fed held rates at 3.50%-3.75% in June with a hawkish tilt.
Why This Matters
The labor data and the Fed's tone shape expectations for borrowing costs on mortgages, loans and savings, and influence whether the central bank leans toward a rate hike later in 2026.
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