A stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs report has flipped market expectations from rate cuts to a potential rate hike before year-end.
A stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs report has flipped market expectations from rate cuts to a potential rate hike before year-end.

The probability of a Federal Reserve interest rate increase in 2026 jumped above 50% on prediction markets Friday after the U.S. added 172,000 nonfarm payrolls in May, more than double the 80,000 consensus estimate.
Contracts on Kalshi pricing a Fed rate hike this year surged to 52% immediately after the Bureau of Labor Statistics release, the prediction market showed. The CME FedWatch Tool also registered a probability above 50%, the first time this cycle that markets have assigned a greater-than-even chance to tighter policy.
April's payrolls figure was revised up sharply to 179,000 from the initial 64,000 estimate, the Labor Department said Friday. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%, matching expectations and showing continued resilience in the labor market. The 10-year Treasury yield jumped above 4.53% following the release, while spot gold fell 0.24% to $4,464.60 an ounce, breaking below the key $4,500 threshold. The U.S. dollar strengthened broadly as traders repriced the rate outlook.
The blockbuster jobs report erased market optimism over a soft economic landing and reshaped the monetary policy outlook for the remainder of 2026. Elevated oil prices have kept inflationary pressures sticky, and the combination of solid economic activity and lingering inflation has strengthened the case for tighter policy. The Fed's next policy meeting is scheduled for July 28-29, where markets will watch for any shift in the central bank's forward guidance.
The 92,000-job beat above consensus is the largest upside surprise since January 2024, according to Labor Department data. The three-month average of payroll gains now stands at roughly 138,000, above the 100,000 breakeven rate that many economists estimate is needed to keep the unemployment rate stable.
The last time markets priced a comparable probability of a rate hike was in April 2024, when a string of above-consensus CPI readings pushed the odds of a hike above 40% on the CME FedWatch Tool. That pricing faded within two months as subsequent data showed the economy cooling. The current repricing may prove more durable if the labor market continues to accelerate through the summer months, particularly with oil prices keeping headline inflation elevated.
For gold and other non-yielding assets, the shift in rate expectations creates sustained headwinds. Spot gold has now lost the $4,500 level that had acted as support since mid-May, with bears targeting the $4,350 zone. A further escalation in selling momentum could push prices to the structural floor at $4,300 an ounce. Silver followed gold lower, falling 0.77% to $73.320 an ounce.
The repricing has implications beyond the immediate market moves. If the Fed does deliver a rate increase this year, it would mark the first hike since July 2023 and reverse the easing cycle that markets had anticipated entering 2026. Bond traders are now pricing a higher terminal rate, with the 10-year yield's move above 4.53% reflecting expectations that policy will remain restrictive for longer.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.