Inflation at 3.1%, Labor Data Missing: The Fed’s Next Move Is Anyone’s Guess
The Federal Reserve is heading into its next policy meeting in unfamiliar territory, and with critical data missing just as inflation ticks higher.
What’s new:
• ADP stunned markets in September with a 32,000 private-sector job loss, a big swing from the 50,000 job gain economists had called for.
• ADP has halted its real-time payroll feed, wiping out visibility into about 20% of the country’s private workforce.
• The government shutdown means BLS jobs reports are delayed, making labor trends anything but clear.
• Inflation is picking up speed: September’s CPI hit 3.1% year-over-year, the highest since early spring (up from 2.9% in August, 2.7% in July). Monthly inflation at 0.4% shows price pressures are far from easing.
What’s at stake for the Fed?
• Inflation is stubborn: A clear trend up from 2.7% → 2.9% → 3.1% means cooling price growth is on hold, and the 2% target looks more distant.
• Data gaps mean the Fed is steering through fog: Without solid labor numbers or timely inflation reads, policymakers are working off guesswork, not guidance.
• Policy risk is up: If inflation keeps running hot, the Fed might hold off on rate cuts, or even consider another hike. On the other hand, if jobs data (when it arrives) shows a slowdown, waiting too long to ease could hurt growth.
• Markets are jumpy: Investors are stuck between betting on rate relief and bracing for stubborn inflation. Every Fed move carries more uncertainty than usual.
• Higher stakes for every call: The absence of clear data makes every rate decision a high-risk play.
The upshot: With inflation over 3% and reliable data hard to come by, the Fed’s next policy move is less a decision and more a calculated risk. The market is watching, and bracing for surprises.
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