Two economic reports hit the wire this morning, and both came in stronger than the month before.
One came from the Labor Department and the other from the Philadelphia Fed. For anyone betting on a sharp slowdown, this morning didn't help the case.
Labor Market Stays Solid
Initial jobless claims fell last week, according to the Labor Department. That's the number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits for the first time - basically a real-time read on layoffs.
When claims fall, fewer people are losing their jobs, and when they rise, the labor market is usually softening.
This week, they fell. It's the latest sign that whatever weakness is in the labor market, it isn't showing up at the layoff window yet.
That matters because the story has been the same for months - hiring is cooling, but layoffs aren't picking up. Workers aren't getting fired in big numbers, they're just having a harder time finding new jobs.
This week's print keeps that pattern going, which is exactly what the soft-landing camp has been hoping to see.
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Philly Factories Are Speeding Up
The other report came from the Philadelphia Fed, whose manufacturing index tracks factory activity across eastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey, and Delaware.
A reading above zero means activity is growing, while below zero means it's shrinking.
This month, the index rose from where it sat last month, with factories putting out more goods and orders picking up. The jump isn't huge, but the direction is what matters.
Manufacturing has been one of the weaker spots in the US economy for over a year, since high interest rates make it expensive for businesses to borrow and expand. A stronger Philly Fed print suggests that pain may be easing.
It's one regional read, not the whole country. But it's the kind of data point that usually shows up in the national numbers a few weeks later.
Worth Noting
The Fed is watching both of these reports closely.
The central bank cut rates three times late last year to take pressure off a softening labor market, hoping to support hiring without reigniting inflation. That's the soft landing everyone keeps talking about.
But rates have been on hold all year, and the Fed's latest projections lean toward a possible hike rather than more cuts. Strong data means the economy can handle higher rates for longer.
That's a mixed bag for markets: good for workers and earnings, but not always for stocks that have been counting on rate cuts to justify higher valuations.
Next up: continuing claims, next month's Philly Fed print, and the national manufacturing reads from ISM.
Two reports, same direction.
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