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Analysis

How bad was the jobs report? That depends on where you zoom in – And what you choose to believe

Markets squinted hard at the July payrolls report and came away with a familiar question: is this a cyclical slowdown knocking at the door, or just the long tail of a post-pandemic sugar high wearing off? On the surface, it looked like a gut punch—headline jobs missed, and the revisions were brutal: nearly 300,000 ghost jobs quietly deleted from the prior months’ tapes, pulling the three-month average down to a meager 35,000. The kind of number that doesn’t scream “soft landing.” But before you panic-sell the recovery narrative, look under the hood.

Yes, the unemployment rate ticked up to 4.2%, narrowly avoiding a round-up to 4.3%. And yes, payroll growth is cooling. But the damage wasn’t broad-based—it was concentrated. The real drag? Government payrolls. Strip that out, and the private sector slowdown looks less apocalyptic and more like a soft exhale.

In fact, if you zoom in on economically sensitive sectors—those canaries in the macro coal mine—you’ll find job creation has all but stalled since the start of the year. That’s not new. It's the same slow bleed we’ve been watching since Q1, just more visible now that the headline mask has slipped.

And yet, irony abounds: the political fallout from this report has eclipsed the numbers themselves. President Trump, with his trademark flair for spectacle, fired Bureau of Labor Statistics chief Erika McEntarfer, accusing her of cooking the numbers—without a shred of evidence. The charge doesn’t even make sense. The revisions don’t tilt toward one party or another. But sense was never the point. Optics were. Call it populist theater meets data vandalism.

The real scandal? He may have just sacked the statistician for accurately reflecting the impact of his own policies—namely, cutting government jobs. It’s like blaming the mirror for the wrinkles.

Will markets care? In the near term, probably not. They’ve long since priced in the President’s volatility premium. But in the long arc of market credibility, this is no small crack. Undermining institutional data integrity is like playing Jenga with the foundations of U.S. asset premium. The tower may stand for a while—but confidence erosion is cumulative.

Still, macro takes the wheel. And here, the narrative is two-handed.

On one side: unemployment is still historically low, profits for the S&P 500 are tracking +10% YoY, and equity markets—led by tech and financials—remain well bid. This supports the "normalization" camp. A cooling labor market is not a collapse; it’s a reset.

But the other side tells a more fractured story. Earnings outside the AI halo—consumer staples, materials, industrials—are decelerating. The same sectors now showing signs of labor fatigue. That’s not just a slowdown in job creation—it’s a crack in the real economy's engine room.

The market now leans more heavily toward a September rate cut, and it's not hard to see why. Even if Powell wanted to hold the line, political gravity is bending the curve. With Trump’s public takedown of the BLS chief and talk of new Fed governors in the air, the independence of the institution is coming under question—again. Traders know: when the Fed loses its spine, it gains a dovish tilt by default.

So where does that leave us?

Somewhere between two uncomfortable truths: the labor market is cooling faster than expected, and the political guardrails protecting economic data are fraying. Neither screams imminent collapse—but together, they chip away at the structural story that’s underwritten America’s market exceptionalism.

The “resilience trade” isn’t dead. But it’s no longer bulletproof either. Keep your stops tight, your eyes on cyclicals, and don’t assume the data is just data anymore—it might be the next battlefield.

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