Fireworks Ahead: Jobs Data Loom After Record Highs

markets

(Monday market open) This short holiday week could punch above its weight. Markets close early Thursday and shut completely Friday, but a host of jobs data arrives before that. It all builds up to Thursday's June nonfarm payrolls report, with job growth forecasts on the low side near 120,000.

Beyond jobs, several Federal Reserve speakers share thoughts today and Fed Chairman Jerome Powell participates in a panel discussion early tomorrow. In Washington, D.C., the Senate prepares for a marathon voting session today, and hopes for a quick resolution played into early market strength. Canada said today it's dropping the digital services tax that caused President Trump to terminate talks with the country and threaten higher tariffs. Separately, Bloomberg reported that Trump threatened a 25% tariff on Japanese cars and that France is confident the European Union can make a deal with the U.S. before the July 9 deadline

Markets confidently entered the ring this morning after the old week ended with new record highs for the S&P 500 index above 6,170 spurred by trade optimism, technical strength, a Middle East ceasefire, dovish Fed comments, and improved investor sentiment. The market has now erased all the tariff-related losses it suffered in March and April, taking just 55 days to march back from its trough to Friday's fresh peaks. "Fear and uncertainty have come down countless notches from where we were," said Alex Coffey, senior trading and derivatives strategist at Schwab. "Historically the first few weeks of July are some of the most bullish of the year."