Leading indicators signal a potentially above-consensus read, with headline job growth projected in the 110–150K range — well above the 65K consensus. Here’s what traders need to watch.
Key Expectations
Overview: Resilience against the odds
At the start of 2025, few would have predicted that the US labor market could hold its ground through an Iran conflict, energy prices more than doubling, and relentless anxiety about AI-driven job displacement. Yet here we are — the jobs market has shrugged off the turbulence, averaging roughly 70,000 net new jobs per month and keeping the unemployment rate anchored at a historically low 4.3%.
The April NFP report is the next test. Market consensus reflects a cautious “steady as she goes” read: modest job growth, stable unemployment, and gradual wage gains — the so-called “low hire, low fire” regime that has defined the past year.

The Fed: Rate cuts effectively off the table
With inflation running above the Fed’s 2% target — fanned by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz — markets have essentially priced out any rate cuts in 2025. CME FedWatch now shows a 70%+ probability of no change to the federal funds rate all year.
Even with Kevin Warsh, Trump’s nominee for the next Fed chair, expected to take the helm, the case for easing will face headwinds. The combination of sticky inflation and a resilient labor market leaves the Fed little political cover to cut.

NFP forecast: what the leading indicators say
We track four historically reliable indicators ahead of each NFP report. Three of the four point bullish this month — a configuration that has historically preceded above-consensus prints.



Our projection: 110–150K, with wide uncertainty
Weighing the four indicators, our internal model points to headline job growth of 110–150K for April — roughly double the consensus. That said, month-to-month NFP swings are notoriously hard to forecast. Limited survey response rates add an extra layer of uncertainty, and we’d caution against reading too much into any single estimate.
Beyond the headline, watch the average hourly earnings figure closely. A hotter-than-expected wage print would reinforce the “no cuts this year” narrative and could spark a sharp USD rally. A miss on unemployment — particularly a tick up to 4.4% — would inject fresh recession anxiety despite a solid payrolls number.

Potential market reaction: three scenarios
The US dollar currently sits near the lower end of its 3-month range as Iran-driven safe haven demand gradually fades. has been recovering after pulling back in late April. A strong NFP print would likely re-energize USD bulls, while a miss could accelerate the dollar’s decline.

Disclaimer: NFP month-to-month fluctuations are notoriously difficult to forecast. Projections above are illustrative and based on leading indicator models only. This article does not constitute investment or trading advice. Always conduct independent analysis before making decisions.
















