Markets feed off of news. That has always been the case, but it seems that the effect has been amplified lately.
On Friday, the labor market complex came in well above expectations. The economy created 303,000 new jobs in March versus the 212,000 that Wall Street expected. The unemployment rate ticked down to 3.8% from last month’s 3.9%. Good news, indeed.
Stocks rallied on Friday despite the fact that good news on the labor front probably means bad news on the interest rate front.
Monday, there was no news, good, bad, or indifferent, and even though it’s the same economy in the same universe, yesterday, stocks and bonds just sat there.
We’ve seen more market volatility on weekends than we saw yesterday. The indexes finished mixed but were very nearly unchanged on the session.
Rates were up across the board, but not by much.
Very little news to move markets on Monday, and the lack of volatility made that clear. We don’t have much going on today either, so we’ll be interested in how markets react.
The rest of the week, though, looks to add some excitement to both the markets and this podcast. Wednesday, the CPI inflation numbers roll out. While always on the minds of Wall Street, that is especially true when interest rates hang in the balance.
Thursday, we will get continuing initial and continuing jobless claims and more inflation data as the producer price index is released.
We will be watching all of it closely so we can report all of it to you, here on the Buzz.