03/30/2026 | Press release | Archived content
Markets head into the week caught between deteriorating growth signals and persistent inflation risks.
Last week's shock -92K print in US Nonfarm Payrolls challenged the idea that the labor market is holding up. But at the same time, the US dollar remains firm and energy risks are rising, tightening financial conditions when markets were expecting relief.
That's what makes this a confirmation week.
Either last week's data was a one-off…
or we're starting to see the first real cracks in the macro backdrop.
The latest labor data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statisticssuggests momentum may be fading faster than expected. A negative NFP print is rare outside of clear slowdown phases - and markets are paying attention.
At the same time, inflation risks aren't going away. Rising geopolitical tensions tied to Iran are keeping oil prices supported, which feeds directly into inflation expectations.
Meanwhile, forward-looking activity data from the Institute for Supply Managementhas been hovering near critical levels, showing an economy that's stable - but fragile.
Put together, this creates a difficult setup for the Fed:
That's why this week's data matters more than usual.
Previous: -92K
Consensus: ~+150K (market expectations range)
Why it matters:
After last week's shock contraction, this is the most important data point of the week. Markets need to know if the labor market is actually breaking - or just noisy.
What to watch:
Market Reaction Map:
Previous: ~50.3
Consensus: ~50 (neutral zone)
Why it matters:
Manufacturing is sitting right at the line between expansion and contraction. This print will tell us whether the industrial side of the economy is stabilizing - or rolling over again.
What to watch:
Market Reaction Map:
Previous: ~52.6
Consensus: ~52
Why it matters:
Services drive roughly 70% of the US economy, making this one of the most important indicators for underlying strength - and inflation persistence.
What to watch:
Market Reaction Map:
Markets are currently pricing:
The risk this week is a repricing shock if data confirms either extreme.
That puts focus on:
This isn't a trend week - it's a truth week.
The data won't just move markets.
It will decide whether traders lean into soft landing, slowdown, or stagflation-lite.
Expect volatility, fast reactions, and very little forgiveness for being positioned on the wrong side.