Everyday Economics: The Fed’s labor-market reality check

Spread the love

Last week wasn’t about a single data point. It was about a shift in tone from policymakers: the labor market may be weaker than the headlines imply, and the economy is increasingly being supported by a narrower set of households and sectors. This week, that narrative gets tested in two places: the February jobs report on Friday, and markets’ evolving assessment of geopolitical risk involving Iran – an oil producer in a region where worst-case scenarios can change the global macro outlook fast.

What Fed speakers said last week: Waller put the labor market in the crosshairs

The most important Fed remarks last week came from Governor Christopher Waller, who delivered a substantive economic outlook speech on Feb. 23. His message was sobering on the labor market.

First, Waller highlighted the annual benchmark revisions to payrolls, which dramatically changed the story of 2025. The revisions turned last year into one of the weakest years for job creation in decades outside of a recession: 181,000 jobs added in total – about 15,000 per month. That’s essentially stall speed for an economy of this size.

Then he went further. Waller argued the revised numbers likely still carry an upward bias – suggesting payroll employment may have actually fallen in 2025, a rare occurrence outside of a recession. The implication is straightforward: don’t anchor on month-to-month volatility. The relevant signal is the trend.

On the broader economy, Waller noted that Q4 2025 real GDP growth came in at 1.4%. But he argued that the government shutdown likely distorted both Q4 and Q1, so a better read is the combined six-month window – where he expects growth to average above 2%.

He also flagged a K-shaped spending dynamic that matters for 2026: higher-income households remain resilient – helped by wealth effects tied to last year’s stock-market gains – while lower- and middle-income consumers are trading down. Demand is still there, but it is becoming more price-sensitive and more unequal.

The broader Fed message remains patience. But Waller’s emphasis on labor-market fragility effectively raises the sensitivity of the reaction function to downside labor surprises: if jobs weaken, the threshold for a rate cut falls – even if inflation is merely drifting lower rather than rapidly converging to 2%.

What to expect from the February jobs report

January reset expectations. Payrolls came in at +130,000, above consensus, and the unemployment rate ticked down to 4.3%. Wages rose 0.4% month over month and 3.7% year over year. After a surprise like that, markets want to know whether January marked stabilization – or noise.

For February, the key is not just the headline payroll number. It’s whether the report confirms breadth and durability, especially given a major comparability break in the household survey.

Three things to watch:

(1) Population controls: a comparability break in the household survey

The BLS delayed the annual population control adjustments that usually appear with January household-survey estimates. Those updated population controls will instead be introduced with the February 2026 release. That means unemployment and labor force participation will reflect a methodological break, and January household estimates will also be revised. Translation: don’t over-interpret a one-tenth move in the unemployment rate this month.

(2) Breadth vs. narrow strength

January’s gains were concentrated. If February job growth broadens across sectors – especially cyclicals and private services – it signals genuine stabilization. If it’s narrow again, it raises questions about durability and reinforces Waller’s argument that the trend is weaker than the monthly prints may suggest.

(3) Hours and wage momentum

In a low-hire environment, hours worked and wage growth can be more informative than payroll counts alone. Softer payrolls with steady hours is a very different signal than softer payrolls with hours rolling over.

Policy implications remain straightforward: the Fed is firmly on hold for March. A weak February print would accelerate market pricing for a June cut. A solid, broad-based number keeps the Fed comfortable staying put well into the summer.

The Iran shock: why the oil market has a buffer — and why yields may still fall in a risk-off episode

Geopolitical risk involving Iran is the type of shock markets price quickly because energy supply risks are nonlinear. But it is equally important to understand what has changed about the oil backdrop relative to past Middle East shocks – and what markets actually did the last time the Strait of Hormuz was in the headlines.

Start with today’s setup: the oil market has a cushion. Supply has been running ahead of demand, inventories have been building, and that inventory accumulation provides an initial buffer against disruptions. Add in potential shock absorbers – OPEC+ spare capacity, emergency reserves, a more flexible U.S. supply response, and shipping and logistics that have proven more resilient through recent stress tests – and the base case looks more like a risk-premium episode than an immediate physical shortage.

That buffered starting point matters because it changes the borrowing-cost story. A key point investors sometimes miss is that an oil shock does not automatically push Treasury yields higher. In past Hormuz-risk flareups, the first move has often been oil up but yields down – because investors rotate into safe havens.

During the June 2019 tanker-attack episode near the Strait of Hormuz, oil rose while Treasury yields fell as markets treated the event as risk-off and growth-negative. Even in September 2019, when attacks on Saudi facilities triggered an outsized intraday oil spike, the bond-market response again reflected competing forces rather than a mechanical rise in yields – safe-haven demand and growth fears can offset inflation optics.

So the real question for markets – and for corporate borrowing costs – is not simply “did oil jump on the headline?” It is whether the shock becomes persistent enough to lift inflation compensation and term premia, or remains a temporary episode that tightens financial conditions mainly through risk-off behavior.

Historically, oil and gasoline price shocks tend to be front-loaded, with limited persistence in headline inflation and muted effects on core inflation and long-run expectations – unless the shock becomes sustained enough to generate second-round effects.

Where the risk gets serious is in the tail scenarios: a broader regional conflict that threatens Strait of Hormuz shipping flows, or internal destabilization within Iran that curtails production or exports for an extended period. Those are the paths that can overwhelm buffers and turn a headline risk premium into a true supply constraint.

If you want one clean scoreboard before overreacting to crude, watch real-time indicators of whether shipping is actually tightening: AIS (Automatic Identification System) signals for tanker transits, speeds, and anchorage “loitering” through Hormuz (MarineTraffic is one widely used source), plus tanker freight rates via the Baltic Exchange (BDTI/BCTI). For the “risk price,” monitor insurance stress through Lloyd’s Joint War Committee Listed Areas updates and market reporting on war-risk premia.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Illinois quick hits: Lawsuit filed over drunk driving deal involving noncitizen

Illinois quick hits: Lawsuit filed over drunk driving deal involving noncitizen

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Lawsuit filed over drunk driving deal involving noncitizen A Freedom of Information Act lawsuit filed with Urbana, Illinois, claims the city...
Illinois to regulate intoxicating hemp products, loosen up on cannabis

Illinois to regulate intoxicating hemp products, loosen up on cannabis

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Headed to the governor’s desk is legislation that will regulate and restrict some intoxicating hemp products and...
Questions loom after data center legislation stalls

Questions loom after data center legislation stalls

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The speaker of the Illinois House says he thinks state lawmakers will eventually pass data center regulations,...
Illinois quick hits: Stop child care scams act clears U.S. House, Illinois U.S. Reps introduce immigrant due process bill

Illinois quick hits: Stop child care scams act clears U.S. House, Illinois U.S. Reps introduce immigrant due process bill

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Stop child care scams act clears U.S. House The U.S. House of Representatives has passed Illinois Congresswoman Mary Miller’s legislation aimed...
Pratt, Bass on track to face each other in Nov. 3 mayoral race

Pratt, Bass on track to face each other in Nov. 3 mayoral race

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square The Center Square) – It continues to appear that Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass will be in a Nov. 3 runoff with Spencer Pratt. Bass,...
Kiley, Wahab, Desmond hold onto leads in House districts

Kiley, Wahab, Desmond hold onto leads in House districts

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square There are still 37 days left for counting ballots, but Democrat Aisha Wahab has a big lead in the race for California's Congressional District 14....
GOP maintains leads despite congressional redistricting

GOP maintains leads despite congressional redistricting

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Republican candidates in congressional races throughout California’s redrawn districts still maintain razor-thin margins with all precincts partially reporting on Wednesday afternoon. Several Republican incumbents maintained...

WATCH: Trump acknowledges Iranian hardliners could jeopardize deal

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Still hopeful the U.S. and Iran can strike a deal on its nuclear program, President Donald Trump acknowledged Wednesday that the volatility inside Iran, not...
Advocates applaud, condemn SPLC wire fraud charges

Advocates applaud, condemn SPLC wire fraud charges

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Lawmakers and political action groups simultaneously applauded and condemned the U.S. Department of Justice’s new superseding indictment from a grand jury against the Southern Poverty...
Gallagher elected to serve rest of LaMalfa's term in Congress

Gallagher elected to serve rest of LaMalfa’s term in Congress

By Madeline ShannonThe Center Square California Assemblymember James Gallagher, R-East Nicolaus, has been elected to serve the rest of the late Republican U.S. Rep. Doug LaMalfa's current term. Gallagher is...
Four House Republicans rebel against Trump, help pass War Powers Resolution

Four House Republicans rebel against Trump, help pass War Powers Resolution

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square In the second congressional rebuke of the Trump administration's mission against Iran, the U.S. House passed a War Powers Resolution when four Republicans joined Democrats...
Hilton, Becerra remain ahead in California gubernatorial race

Hilton, Becerra remain ahead in California gubernatorial race

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square It still appears that Steve Hilton and Xavier Becerra will advance out of the June 2 primary and into the Nov. 3 general election for...
Budget math undercuts Bessent's deficit reduction pledge

Budget math undercuts Bessent’s deficit reduction pledge

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump's next budget projects federal deficits running more than double Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent's stated target through at least 2029 while also calling...
State Police, IDOT break ground on $14M training facility

State Police, IDOT break ground on $14M training facility

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Illinois State Police and the Illinois Department of Transportation broke ground on a joint venture to...
Republican data privacy bill scrutinized in congressional hearing

Republican data privacy bill scrutinized in congressional hearing

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Businesses and online privacy advocates hold diametrically opposing views on the wisdom of congressional Republicans’ plans to enact a nationwide framework for consumer data privacy...