A Rate Hike Next Month? The Treasury Market Has Doubts

 | Aug 30, 2016 08:12AM ET

Yesterday’s upbeat interest-rate hike is near, perhaps as early as next month’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting.

Yet support for pricing in a new round of policy tightening is modest at best via Treasury yields. Is that because job growth is expected to slow in this Friday’s employment report for July after two months of strong increases?

Total nonfarm payrolls are on track to rise by a moderate 175,000 in August, according to Econoday.com’s consensus forecast. That’s a decent gain, but it’s well below July’s increase of 255,000 and July’s 292,000 surge.

Monthly data is noisy and so it’s best to focus on the year-over-year trend. The August estimate translates into a 1.74% increase vs. the year-earlier level, fractionally above July’s annual pace.

Job growth has clearly slowed in year-over-year terms, which isn’t terribly surprising for an economic recovery that’s celebrated its seventh birthday in June—one of the longest expansions on record, according to NBER data.

The question is whether the Fed will feel compelled to continue squeezing rates when the trend for job growth is on a downward trajectory?