The U.S. economy added 115,000 jobs in April — nearly double the 65,000 analysts had forecast — and the unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%, according to Friday’s Bureau of Labor Statistics release. On the surface, it’s a resilient labor market. Beneath it, the picture is more complicated, and for investors watching the Federal Reserve’s next move, the report effectively confirms what markets had already suspected: rate cuts aren’t coming anytime soon.
Job growth, which had been narrowly concentrated in healthcare for much of the year, showed some broadening in April, with gains in transportation, warehousing, and retail. That’s the good news. The bad news is that manufacturing employment declined and federal government payrolls continued to shrink — two sectors that tend to have downstream effects on smaller companies in industrial supply chains and government contracting. The labor force participation rate slipped further to 61.8%, down from 62.5% in January, a trend that complicates the headline unemployment number and signals that some workers are simply exiting the labor pool rather than finding jobs.
Monthly payroll data has also been unusually erratic this year. February showed a notable revision to a loss of 156,000 jobs, March was revised up to 185,000, and January produced 160,000. The April beat, while welcome, arrives in a context where the underlying trend line is genuinely difficult to read. That volatility, combined with an unemployment rate that has held in a narrow 4.3%–4.5% band, suggests the labor market is stable but not accelerating — and probably not deteriorating either.
With the employment side of the Fed’s dual mandate looking reasonably solid, central bank officials have pivoted their focus squarely toward inflation. The Fed’s preferred gauge — the Personal Consumption Expenditures index — rose 3.5% in March on a headline basis, up sharply from 2.8% in February. Core PCE, which strips out food and energy, came in at 3.2%. Both figures are well above the Fed’s 2% target, and inflation has now been running above that target for more than five years.
The concerns deepening at the Fed go beyond domestic data. The ongoing conflict in the Middle East is pushing energy prices higher, and several Fed officials flagged this week that sustained elevated energy costs could crimp consumer spending, slow business investment, and — critically — feed back into inflation even as demand softens. Tariffs are adding further upward pressure on goods prices. It’s a stagflationary cocktail that gives the Fed very little room to maneuver in either direction.
For small and microcap investors, the implications are direct. A Fed that is frozen in place — unable to cut because of inflation, unwilling to hike without clearer deterioration in employment — is a Fed that keeps borrowing costs elevated for longer. For smaller companies that rely on access to credit markets to fund growth, acquisitions, or operations, that environment remains a genuine headwind. Deal financing stays expensive. Multiples on growth-oriented companies stay compressed. The companies that will outperform in this environment are those generating cash, managing debt conservatively, and positioned in sectors with pricing power.
Kevin Warsh is set to take over as Federal Reserve Chair in less than two weeks. His first policy decision will be made against one of the more complex macroeconomic backdrops in recent memory.