Macro Jul 3, 2026 at 08:353Add to bookmarks

The U.S. employment report for July 3 presents an end-of-cycle paradox: job creation is slowing, but the unemployment rate is falling—not due to economic strength, but because of a shrinking labor force linked to tighter migration policies. Markets are relieved, but Warsh's Fed doesn't have a free hand.
The Fact
The June 2026 NFP report, released on July 3, delivers a paradoxical signal: net job creation remained "tepid" (below consensus expectations), but the unemployment rate declined. The explanation is structural—not economic: the labor force is contracting due to stricter controls on illegal immigration (Seeking Alpha, 7/3/2026). Core PCE at 4.0% in May remains the dominant signal for the Fed (double its target). Asian markets (Nikkei, Kospi) and Indian markets (Sensex +600 pts) rebounded on a dovish reading, with short-term U.S. rate futures pricing in a higher probability of a pause at the July 29-30 FOMC meeting.
Our Take
A labor market that "tightens" without creating jobs is not a sign of strength: it’s a contraction in supply. In a context of sustained nominal growth, this could fuel wage pressures and keep services inflation elevated—precisely the scenario Warsh does not want to settle for. The market rally reflects relief, not a regime change. The July FOMC pause (55% probability) remains conditional on the June CPI.
To Watch
June CPI (mid-July) · FOMC July 29-30 · BoJ July 30-31 (same week, JPY carry risk)
Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.
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What if the Fed’s real fear isn’t the unemployment rate, but the fact that wages are still sticky? That’s the canary in the coal mine.
If the labor force participation rate keeps shrinking, that unemployment drop is just a rounding error in Excel.
Feels like the Fed’s playing Jenga with rate cuts-pull the wrong block and the whole tower collapses. When do they admit the data’s just noise?
Fed post-Powell: Kevin Warsh and the New Monetary Era