U.S. jobs report misses; yields tumble

The U.S. economy added 22,000 jobs in August, well below the 75,000 expected. The unemployment rate rose to 4.3%, in line with the forecasts. The report points to cooling hiring and rising slack—conditions that reinforce expectations for a September rate cut.

Post-release, major equity indices dipped modestly while the U.S. The dollar index fell 0.54%. The 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields retreated to weekly lows. Payroll gains are near five-year lows, and joblessness is the highest since September 2021.

2-year Treasury yields break key support

The 2-year yield fell through a key support area near 3.50%. Because the 2-year is highly sensitive to policy rates, the break suggests that markets see monetary easing as imminent. The 2s–10s curve widened by roughly 50 bps, reflecting a view that the tightening cycle is effectively over and that longer-term growth/inflation expectations are stabilizing.

2-year Treasury yieldsGold surges to new record

Spot gold surged to a record near $3,600/oz, on track for its best week in almost four months. Softer labor data pushed the dollar lower and Treasury yields down—both tailwinds for bullion—while safe-haven demand likely rose as investors reassessed growth and stagflation risks.

FedWatch pricing shifts to three cuts in 2025

Following a weaker NFP and higher unemployment (4.3%), CME FedWatch shifted to three rate cuts by end-2025: a 25 bp cut in September (92% probability), a second 25 bp in October (72%), and a third 25 bp in December (67%). There is also an 8% tail risk priced for a 50 bp move in September. Only weeks ago, markets still entertained a prolonged restrictive stance; the accumulating labor softness has meaningfully changed that calculus.