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Just caught the TD Securities take on March nonfarm payroll numbers and honestly, it's pretty underwhelming. They're calling for just 30k new jobs overall - 40k from private sector but minus 10k in government positions. That's basically the Fed's signal that the economy's cooling off, which is exactly what they want to see right now.
What's interesting is how they're framing the unemployment rate. Expecting it to hold at 4.4%, but the risks actually point downward - meaning it could creep up to 4.5%. The February weather and strike disruptions are basically reversing out, so if the nonfarm payroll print comes in weak anyway, that tells you something about underlying labor momentum. Younger workers especially might face more pressure.
The bigger picture here? A weak nonfarm payroll report actually gives the Fed cover to stay patient on rates. The economy's not running hot like 2022, so there's no urgency to keep tightening. If headline job growth stays soft and unemployment ticks up, we might see some brief USD weakness, though Middle East uncertainty is keeping people long dollars for now. It's one of those setups where the market's waiting to see if labor really is rolling over or if this is just noise.