Yield Alert: Spike in Treasury Yields Hurts Stocks Ahead of Key June Jobs Report

 | Jul 06, 2023 09:26AM ET

(Thursday market open) Things are heating up, and we’re not just talking about the July weather. A week from the start of Q2 earnings season, Wall Street is on tenterhooks awaiting tomorrow’s crucial June Nonfarm Payrolls report. In the meantime, there’s a host of labor data to digest today before Friday’s excitement.

The heat isn’t only coming from jobs data. Treasury yields are also climbing the mercury, and that could be one factor weighing on stocks early Thursday. The 10-year Treasury note yield is flirting with 4% for the first time since early March. Higher yields could raise valuation concerns for some of the higher-priced stocks out there.

Stocks played defense Wednesday on their first day back from the Fourth of July holiday, with utilities, staples, and health care among the better performers during a mostly uneventful session. Some major Info tech stocks struggled again, and the sector is near the bottom of the sector scoreboard for the last week. A few mega-cap tech names were in the red this morning in premarket trading, possibly hurt by climbing Treasury yields. But in a welcome development, market breadth has widened somewhat recently.

h2 Morning rush/h2
  • The 10-year Treasury note yield (TNX) climbed two more basis points to nearly 3.97%.
  • The U.S. Dollar Index ($DXY) is stable at 103.13.
  • Cboe Volatility Index® (VIX) futures continued to climb to 14.91.
  • WTI Crude Oil (/CL) rose to $71.91 per barrel.
h2 Just in/h2

The ADP jobs report released this morning showed a massive 497,000 positions created in June, up from 267,000 in May. Service sector job growth far outpaced goods-producing growth, and ADP’s chief economist said “consumer-facing industries had a strong June.” However, ADP believes hiring is likely “cresting.”

Treasury yields spiked after the ADP report, but it’s important to remember that recent ADP figures haven’t been in sync with the government’s official jobs data. Today’s report doesn’t necessarily mean we’ll see a meteoric rise in tomorrow’s Nonfarm Payrolls data.

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Weekly initial jobless claims of 248,000 were close to Wall Street’s consensus view and in the middle of the range seen over the last month. They remain up substantially from earlier this year.

h2 Eye on the Fed/h2

Futures trading indicates an 88% probability that the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will raise interest rates by 25 basis points at its July meeting, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. U.S. economic data’s been mostly positive since June, reinforcing hike ideas.

The market prices in much less chance of an additional rate hike later this year, putting probabilities in the 30% to 35% range. By this time next year, the market anticipates nearly 80% odds that rates will be lower than now, in the 4.5% to 5% range. The Fed’s current target rate is between 5% and 5.25%.

Minutes from the FOMC’s June 13–14 meeting released yesterday didn’t seem to influence trading much on Wall Street, simply underscoring that committee members wanted to assess new data at the current rates before making the next move.

  • Part of the thinking is based on the lag between rate hikes and their actual impact on the economy. The Federal Reserve hiked rates by 500 basis points in less than 14 months without taking a breath, and this pause presumably gave the economy more time to absorb the impact.
  • While the vote to pause hikes was unanimous, it’s interesting that the Fed qualified policymakers’ desire to raise rates from here, noting that “almost all participants” agreed that additional hikes in 2023 would be appropriate.
  • At the same time, not all of the FOMC necessarily wanted to pause in June, though the unanimous vote didn’t reflect dissent. Nevertheless, there didn’t seem to be any disagreement that inflation remained “unacceptably high” and that declines in inflation had been slower than expected.
  • The housing market, in particular, seems to be a source of inflation worry among FOMC officials.

Jobs countdown: June Nonfarm Payrolls are due out before the open Friday morning.

Here is consensus for Friday’s jobs report, according to Trading Economics:

  • June jobs growth of 225,000, down from 339,000 in May
  • June monthly wage growth of 0.3%, unchanged from May
  • June annual wage growth of 4.2% from a year ago, down from 4.3% in May
  • Unemployment of 3.6%, down from 3.7% the prior month
h2 Stocks in the Spotlight/h2

By most measures, U.S. auto sales in the first half of 2023 accelerated smoothly. Major carmakers like General Motors (NYSE:GM) and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) saw resilience among auto buyers despite monthly payments soaring to historical highs that have nearly 20% of new auto loans speeding past the $1,000 monthly payment barrier. GM delivered 691,798 vehicles in the second quarter, up 19% year-over-year, the company said yesterday. First-half deliveries for GM rose 18%.

Tesla , GM, and Ford (F) saw shares gain traction in the last six weeks or so, The question is whether the second half of 2023 can build on this recovery; there are some indications that maybe not. Cox Automotive, an automotive services and technology provider, said it expects “minor slowing” in the second half after the first half’s anticipated 11.6% rise in sales volume. The firm sees 2023 sales rising to 15 million, up 8% from 2022. Headwinds will grow, the firm says, due partly to “credit availability” challenges. In other words, it’s getting harder for buyers to qualify for auto loans.