Two the Point — The Federal Reserve Looks to Balance Inflation and Growth
The U.S. labor market is cooling, showing signs of normalization rather than alarming contraction. The Fed is now focusing on achieving full employment and maintaining price stability, which supports a resilient economic outlook.
Key Insights:
- Labor Market Normalization: The cooling market reflects a gradual return to balance after prolonged growth. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell noted this normalization in his recent speech. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 206,000 in June, though there were downward revisions of 111,000 to prior months.
- Unemployment and Jobless Claims: The unemployment rate increased to 4.1%, while initial jobless claims rose to 238,000. These indicators warrant attention but do not yet signal a recession.
- Wage Growth and Inflation Alignment: Average hourly earnings grew by 0.3% month-over-month and 3.9% year-over-year in June, aligning with the Fed’s 2% inflation target plus productivity growth, reducing concerns of a wage-price spiral.
- Dual Mandate Focus: The Fed’s rhetoric is shifting to acknowledge the importance of full employment alongside price stability, indicating a more balanced approach to monetary policy.
- Economic Resilience and GDP Growth: The U.S. economy is holding up well, with real GDP tracking at approximately 1.5% for Q2, mirroring the soft-landing scenario of 1995. This resilience supports our optimistic long-term investment outlook.