Jobs data: Is good news actually bad news for markets, Fed?

The US labor market is starting 2024 on a hot streak, adding 353,000 jobs to the economy in January and outpacing estimates of 185,000. Citi U.S. Equity Strategy Director Drew Pettit and BMO Capital Markets Senior Economist Jennifer Lee join Yahoo Finance Live to discuss what January's hot jobs report could mean for the Federal Reserve, a soft landing scenario, and equity markets.

"I do disagree that good news is actually bad news, I think that's been changing. I think if we had a print like this three, six months ago, we're probably looking at a much more negative equity market," Pettit admits, while Lee believes positive earnings results could convince Fed officials to hold interest rates into the first half of 2024.

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Editor's note: This article was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

BRAD SMITH: For more on the jobs report, we turn to our panel. We've got Jennifer Lee, BMO senior economist and managing director, and Drew Pettit who is the Citi US equity strategy director here. Great to have you both here with us today. Jennifer, I want to begin with you. I just want to get your read on this red hot report that just came in on the headline print.

Well, good morning. Thank you very much for having me here. So my first words were, oh my God.

[LAUGHTER]

JENNIFER LEE: Like I think everyone was shocked at this. This whole soft landing, no landing narrative, I think, is going to take flight again. And this is a classic case of how, you know, --the weird times that we're in where good news is bad and bad news would be considered good.

But you know, I think there's no question. This is probably why, and I'm sure if Fed Chair Powell-- I don't know if you had any inkling about this, but I'm sure he's very glad that he dismissed that possibility of a March rate cut because that's definitely not happening.

SEANA SMITH: Drew, how are you looking at this from a strategist perspective? Obviously, March even less likely than the chatter was ahead of this print, but pushing it out there to what we could even see, the odds that we would even have a rate cut here in the first half of the year.

DREW PETTIT: So apologies for coming off a little flat, but I'm not really a sports car driver. I'm more of a-- I have two kids under two. Closer to a mini van kind of guy at this point. So honestly, this doesn't freak me out from an equity perspective. You know, I do disagree that good news is actually bad news. I think that's been changing.