The Week Ahead: Will Employment News Change The Fed’s Course?

 | May 04, 2015 01:10AM ET

This week’s economic news is mostly jobs-related. The Fed has cited employment as the most important factor in future rate decisions. There is plenty of FedSpeak on tap. Pundits love to talk about the Fed. Voila! The theme for the week will combine all of these elements:

Can the employment news change the Fed’s course?

Prior Theme Recap

In my last WTWA I predicted that attention will focus on markets rather than the economic reports. In particular, I suggested several different viewpoints about expected market action. While each of these got a riff or two during the week, I was expecting the main theme to be the challenge to the top of the trading range. With the soft start to the week, the upside breakout potential got little attention.

Feel free to join in my exercise in thinking about the upcoming theme. We would all like to know the direction of the market in advance. Good luck with that! Second best is planning what to look for and how to react. That is the purpose of considering possible themes for the week ahead.

h3 This Week’s Theme
/h3

This week’s economic news is mostly about employment. At week’s end we will get the monthly employment situation report, with plenty of angles and spin potential. In addition we will see the ADP private employment report, news about layoffs, initial jobless claims, and a report on service sector employment. The Fed is giving special attention to employment, watching for signs that the labor market is getting tight and wage pressures mounting. This week I expect discussion to center on employment and the aftermath of last week’s FOMC rate meeting. Fed speakers will be out all week, discussing the data and answering questions. Analysts will be asking:

Can the employment data change the Fed’s course?

h3 The Viewpoints /h3

Fed policy is a favorite market topic, eliciting a range of viewpoints encompassing both economic prospects and prospective rate tightening. Here are the leading candidates:

  • The economy remains very weak, so the Fed is on hold. (Numerous super-bears).
  • The economy remains sluggish, but the Fed will begin a modest rate increase program nonetheless. (Tim Duy ).
  • There are already signs of inflation and the Fed will begin rate increases by September. (Scott Grannis )