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Bond Traders Swing to Powell’s Side as Trump Calls for Rate Cuts

(Bloomberg) -- Fifteen minutes after the April employment report hit early Friday, President Donald Trump seized on the surprisingly strong job growth to ratchet up his pressure on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, saying there was no reason to hold off on cutting interest rates.

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Bond traders came to the exact opposite conclusion.

The pace of hiring — as well as a manufacturing report on Thursday that wasn’t as downbeat as expected — drove traders to dial back rate-cut bets that had steadily mounted as Trump’s trade war unleashed havoc in financial markets and sowed fears of a US recession.

After piling into short-term Treasuries, anticipating the Fed would start easing policy as soon as next month to contain the fallout, they reversed course. Two-year yields shot up, staging the biggest two-day jump since October, and futures traders started pricing in what Fed officials have been consistently trying to drive home — that they will remain in wait-and-see mode until there’s more evidence that the economy has turned.

“With inflation being above the Fed’s target, tariffs which can move prices higher and a still solid labor market, I think the Fed is unlikely to do anything,” said Priya Misra, portfolio manager at JPMorgan Asset Management. “But they are data dependent and the data could turn weaker by the time the Fed meets mid-June.”

The latest data underscored the vexing reality that has whipsawed markets ever since Trump stepped up his US-against-the-world trade war a month ago, triggering the type of volatility that hadn’t been seen since the pandemic or the 2008 credit crisis as his pauses, threats, and overtures to negotiations made it virtually impossible to forecast how it will all play out.

It is almost certain to eventually slow the US economy as businesses supply chains are upended, consumer confidence tumbles, and the tariff increases that are in place deliver at least a temporary inflation shock. Yet with the outcome in limbo and much of the impact yet to be felt, the economy — through last month, at least — has remained resilient enough to send the S&P 500 Index rebounding back to where it was before Trump’s April 2 tariff rollout.

“Data right now is fine, and the Fed likes to move slowly,” said Ed Al-Hussainy, rates strategist at Columbia Threadneedle. “That leaves the rate-cut expectations vulnerable.”