Global stocks tumbled sharply, closing the week on a downcast note Friday after poor U.S. jobs data stoked recession fears while Japan's Nikkei fall on a resurgent yen.
The U.S. economy added 114,000 jobs last month, a drop from the prior month and fewer than expected, while the jobless rate rose to 4.3%, the highest level since October 2021.
The report added to recession fears following lackluster manufacturing data on Thursday, pushing major U.S. indices into the red for the entire day after a down session in Europe.
"Historically it's very difficult to achieve a soft landing," said Steve Sosnick of Interactive Brokers. "It's easy for a soft landing to sneak up on you and become a hard landing. And that's what the market is very much afraid of right now."
"Things are deteriorating quickly,'' said Julia Pollak, chief economist at ZipRecruiter.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average finished at 39,737.26, down 1.5% for the day and 2.1% for the week.
"And just like that, the market is worried about the U.S. economy suffering a hard landing," said Briefing.com analyst Patrick O'Hare.
"A sober market didn't need any more cold water poured on it, but that is exactly what it got with the July employment report, which was filled with ample headline disappointment," he said.
But Art Hogan of B. Riley Wealth said the market is likely overreacting to a few weak data points, noting that most of the corporate earnings released in the last few weeks have been solid.
Earlier, European stock markets closed sharply in the red: Amsterdam retreated by more than 3%, Frankfurt 2.3%, Paris 1.6% and London 1.3%.
Tokyo tanks
In Asia, where markets closed before the latest U.S. jobs data, Tokyo led losses.
The Nikkei 225 tanked 5.8% – its biggest drop since the start of the coronavirus pandemic four years ago – owing to a stronger yen, which hits Japan's key export sector.
Hong Kong and Sydney were off more than 2%, Seoul gave up more than 3% and Taipei shed more than 4%, with losses also in Shanghai, Mumbai and Singapore.
Wednesday's decision by the Bank of Japan (BOJ) to hike interest rates for the second time in 17 years – and talk of another to come – strengthened the yen to its best level since March.
The dollar also weakened against the pound and the euro as traders bet the weaker U.S. jobs data would translate into Federal Reserve interest rate cuts.
"The situation now shifts from 'if' the Fed will cut to 'by how much' will they cut," said Bret Kenwell, U.S. investment analyst at trading platform eToro.
"The labor market is the lifeblood of the U.S. economy and the Fed (Federal Reserve) needs to ensure that they don't risk weakening it too much solely in an effort to bring down inflation," he said.
Unemployment
The unemployment rate's jump to 4.3% in July crossed a tripwire that historically has signaled recession – though some economists say the gauge probably is not reliable in the post-pandemic economy.
Hiring may have been disrupted by Hurricane Beryl, which slammed the Texas economy last month. And ZipRecruiter's Pollak noted employers have cut worker hours and made temporary layoffs – suggesting that they are optimistic a rate cut may turn things around.
"They are just slowing hiring and putting people on temporary layoff, furlough," Pollak said. "They want to get back to business. They see lots of opportunities to expand. They just need rates to be (lower).''
The Federal Reserve said this week that it needed to see more evidence inflation is moving toward its 2% target before it cuts rates.
Chair Jerome Powell characterized the American job market as healthy despite calls for the central bank to begin lowering its benchmark rate, which stands at a 23-year high.
Hourly wages rose just 3.6% from July 2023, the smallest year-over-year gain since May 2021, and another sign that inflation could be heading closer to the Fed's target.
July job gains were concentrated in a few industries. Healthcare and social assistance firms added 64,000 jobs last month, accounting for 56% of hiring. Restaurants, hotels and bars added nearly 26,000 jobs.
Labor Department revisions, however, clipped 29,000 jobs from May-June payrolls. This year, the economy has generated nearly 203,000 jobs a month, solid but down from 251,000 last year, 377,000 in 2022 and a record 604,000 in 2021, when the job market roared back from pandemic lockdowns.
The economy is weighing heavily on voters' minds ahead of the November presidential election. Many Americans have been unimpressed after three years of strong job gains, exasperated instead by high prices. Two years after inflation hit a four-decade high, price increases have eased but consumers are still paying 19% more for goods and services than they were in spring 2021.
The so-called Sahm Rule, named for the former Fed economist who came up with it, Claudia Sahm, holds that a recession is almost always already underway if the unemployment rate (based on a three-month moving average) rises by half a percentage point from its low of the past year. The jump to 4.3% unemployment crosses that threshold.
Still, Sahm, now chief economist at New Century Advisors, said before Friday's report that this time "a recession is not imminent'' even if the Sahm Rule were triggered. That is partly because America's job numbers have been upended by an unexpected surge in immigration – much of it illegal – over the past couple of years.
The new arrivals have poured into the American labor force and eased labor shortages across the economy – but not all have found jobs right away, pushing up unemployment. People who have entered the country illegally are also less inclined to respond to Labor Department surveys, meaning they may go uncounted as employed.
On Wednesday, the Fed signaled that it would likely cut rates in September from its current level of 5.3%. The slowdown in hiring has spurred calls from economists and Wall Street for a half-point cut by the Fed, rather than the more traditional quarter-point.
Powell downplayed that possibility Wednesday, though he did not rule it out.
A break on borrowing costs could not come soon enough for many business owners.
Chris Maher is CEO OceanFirst Bank in Red Bank, New Jersey, which works with 20,000 small businesses from restaurants and hotels to car dealerships. Maher said those businesses have pulled back on hiring since Memorial Day as its customers grow more cautious.
A Fed rate cut in September could boost businesses like home construction and car dealerships by cutting the cost of loans, leading to a pickup in hiring, Maher said, but he remains cautious.
At the Barrel Room, a San Francisco wine bar and restaurant, founder Sarah Trubnick is puzzled by what's happening with the economy. After an "insanely busy'' first three months of 2024, she had high hopes for the rest of the year. But business plummeted over the summer, and she doesn't know why.
She had to lay off four workers and now has 10 at the business she founded in 2011.
"We had been in business for many years,'' she said. "So we were very familiar with the patterns, and we knew when to bring on more people when to expect difficult times. And we knew we had to have a financial cushion at times. We had it all down to a science. And post-COVID I can't figure out the pattern.''
Julian Cannon, 34, of New York lost his job as a reporter at an online publication back in December. He's applied for hundreds of jobs with no luck. One company interviewed him eight times for several positions, then ended up hiring a candidate who already worked there. "I'm still looking, and I'm at a breaking point,'' he said.