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Benzinga
Benzinga
Shanthi Rexaline

Why This Analyst Thinks 'Fed Pivot Trade' Could Go Into Overdrive On Friday — It's Linked To Sept Jobs Data

This week, the market has flattered only to deceive. After starting with two strong sessions, the momentum faded midweek as the data-dependent Federal Reserve kept traders on tenterhooks.

Come Friday, traders would get to digest key economic data that could have a say on the central bank’s upcoming rate decisions for the year.

What Happened: Historical data suggests that the September non-farm payrolls data is more often weak rather than strong, Scott MinerdGuggenheim Partners’ global chief investment officer said late Thursday. He shared a graphic on Twitter that showed, between 1997 and 2022, about 76% of the time, the jobs data came in below estimates in September.

The graphic was captioned, “September is NFP Downside Surprise King.”

If the Labor Department’s jobs data comes in below the consensus expectation of 250,000, it could be viewed as weak and the “Fed pivot trade could go into overdrive,” he added.

Benzinga’s Take:  The September jobs data alone cannot lead the Federal Reserve to drop its guard. Between now and the Nov. 2 Federal Open Market Committee meeting, several key economic events and data are due that could sway policymakers. 

The September consumer price inflation report is due on Oct. 13, followed by the advance third-quarter GDP data on Oct. 27. A couple of central bank decisions, from Europe and Japan, are also scheduled for the month’s end.

Additionally, the market will digest third-quarter earnings and guidance from corporations. Corporate profit growth has been a big driver market driver in recent years. If the slackness seen in the second quarter continues into the next and reflects in the forward outlook, investors could construe it as more pain ahead for the market.

Calling for a policy pivot with Friday’s data alone may not be accurate, although weak jobs data will encourage traders to go positive on the rate outlook in the near term at least.

The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust(NYSE: SPY) closed Thursday’s session at $373.20, down 1.03%, according to Benzinga Pro data.

 

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