Four labour-market releases could set the tone for the week
This is a high-impact week for US macro, with markets focusing on four labour-market releases that arrive in quick succession. The JOLTS job-openings report, the ADP employment print, the Challenger layoffs report and Friday's official non-farm payrolls release will all feed into the same question: is the labour market still strong enough to keep the US economy looking resilient?
That matters because a steady run of firm data would reinforce the idea that the economy is still absorbing higher rates without breaking. If that story holds, the market may have to keep pricing a firmer dollar and elevated Treasury yields for longer.
Stronger data could keep pressure on the dollar and rates to the upside
According to the Spanish source, the market is watching for job openings near 6.8 million, ADP growth above the 100,000 mark, Challenger layoffs below 100,000 and a non-farm payrolls release that keeps the unemployment rate around 4.3%. If the data cluster lands close to or above those benchmarks, investors are likely to read it as another sign that labour demand remains solid.
That would probably matter most in the dollar and the rates market. A firmer labour backdrop would make it harder for investors to argue for easier policy expectations, and the USD could become the clearest beneficiary if positive macro surprises continue to accumulate.
If the labour market disappoints, bond yields may react first
The source also argues that weaker data could hit rates before equities. If the labour reports miss expectations, Treasury yields may retreat from important levels as markets dial back the risk of further upside pressure on borrowing costs.

