Everyday Economics: Cooling jobs, a cautious Fed, and a housing recovery that needs confidence

Everyday Economics: Cooling jobs, a cautious Fed, and a housing recovery that needs confidence

Spread the love

The week ahead is framed by three macro threads that are increasingly pulling against each other: a Federal Reserve that is debating how restrictive policy still is, a labor market that continues to cool beneath the surface, and a housing market that’s showing pockets of improved affordability – but transaction volume that remains weak against a fragile confidence backdrop.

We’ll start with a heavy lineup of Fed officials on the speaking circuit. But the bigger signal will come from a delayed jobs report, January existing home sales, and the CPI report.

The labor market is cooling — and the openings vs. job seekers picture has flipped

A useful way to summarize the shift is to compare the balance of job openings and job seekers at the peak of the boom versus now.

In late 2025, there were more job seekers than job openings. In fact, by December there were about 16% more unemployed workers than available openings – a meaningful change from the post-pandemic peak. In April 2022, by contrast, there were roughly 2.3 job openings for every unemployed worker, a labor market tight enough to give workers exceptional bargaining power.

That’s not a small rotation – it’s the difference between a job market where workers can move easily and one where mobility is more constrained, and hiring becomes harder to secure.

This is the “low-hire, low-fire” labor market. Employers are reluctant to cut staff aggressively, but they’re also reluctant to expand payrolls. The result is a labor market that looks stable in the headline unemployment rate – until it isn’t. If the number of job openings continues to decline or layoffs rise even modestly, unemployment could move higher fairly quickly.

Waller’s message: policy is still restrictive, labor is the risk.

Fed Governor Chris Waller just delivered one of the clearest “cut sooner” arguments you’ll hear from a top policymaker. He said he dissented at the most recent meeting because he concluded that a 25bp cut was appropriate. In his view, last year’s cuts moved policy closer to neutral, but monetary policy is still restricting activity – and the data make it clear that additional easing is needed.

His case rests on two points.

First, he argues the labor market is weak despite solid economic growth. The unemployment rate has risen over the past year even if it ticked down recently. More importantly, payroll growth in 2025 was very low compared with the prior decade. Waller goes further: he expects upcoming revisions to show payroll employment growth was essentially flat – “zero, zip, nada.” His point isn’t rhetorical flair; it’s a warning that labor demand has cooled materially and that the labor market can deteriorate faster once it begins.

He also notes something that resonates with business leaders: layoffs may be planned for 2026, based on what he has heard in outreach meetings. That doesn’t mean a wave of job cuts is inevitable, but it does mean uncertainty is rising, and that uncertainty itself can suppress hiring, capital spending, and big-ticket consumer purchases.

Second, Waller argues the inflation story is being distorted by tariffs. Even if tariff effects keep inflation elevated in the near term, he believes appropriate monetary policy is to “look through” those effects as long as inflation expectations remain anchored. In his framing, underlying inflation looks closer to the Fed’s goal and on a path consistent with sustainable disinflation. With that backdrop and a weak labor market, he thinks policy should be closer to neutral – around the median longer-run estimate – rather than staying meaningfully above it.

For markets, Waller’s remarks put a marker down: if the upcoming data confirm labor softness and inflation continues to cooperate, the center of gravity at the Fed could shift toward easing sooner, not later.

Existing home sales: improving affordability meets labor market uncertainty

January existing home sales will mostly reflect homes that went pending in late November and December. Existing home sales “bounced along the bottom” throughout 2025.

Seasonality mattered in December. Activity typically softens around the holidays, which can dampen contract signings even when underlying demand is improving. But there’s also a more constructive trend in parts of the market: affordability has improved, especially in many Sun Belt metros where prices and rents have eased and inventory has risen. Those markets have offered buyers more breathing room than they’ve had in years.

Looking ahead, though, the risk mix is changing. Mortgage rates still matter, but two other factors are becoming increasingly central to the 2026 outlook for housing transactions: slowing population growth and a weaker labor market. Transactions are ultimately a confidence product. Even when affordability improves, buyers and sellers hesitate if job security feels less certain.

CPI: shelter should keep providing downward pressure

On inflation, the key tailwind remains shelter. Rental vacancy rates remain elevated – 7.2% in Q4 – and market rent growth continues to moderate. With official shelter inflation measures tending to lag asking rents—adjusting only as renters move and leases renew—that pipeline suggests continued downward pressure ahead, an important offset if tariff-related effects show up in the near-term data.

The takeaway: the labor market cooling is becoming the dominant macro story. If jobs soften further while CPI continues to ease, the policy debate shifts quickly from “how long to hold” to “how soon to cut,” and housing’s tentative recovery becomes more dependent on worker confidence than on rates alone.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

peotone library graphic logo.4

Peotone Library Board Selects Local Firm Welch Cleaning Pro for Janitorial Services

Peotone Public Library District Meeting | Jan. 15, 2026 Article Summary: The Peotone Public Library District Board voted unanimously to change janitorial providers, selecting a local Peotone-based company over the...
Illinois ranks near bottom in social mobility

Illinois ranks near bottom in social mobility

By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – With Illinois now ranking among the hardest states for residents to improve their economic and social...
Monee Township Graphic.4

Monee Township Receives Over $33,000 Following Village TIF 3 Closure

Monee Township Board of Trustees Meeting | January 15, 2026 Article Summary: The Monee Township Board of Trustees announced a sudden financial windfall resulting from the closure of a local...
Screenshot 2026-02-18 at 2.04.18 PM

Phase 2 of Village-Wide Fiber Network Construction to Begin Soon

Monee Village Board Meeting | Feb. 11, 2026 Article Summary: Construction on the second phase of the village’s high-speed fiber internet network is scheduled to begin in late February or early...
Meeting-Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Crete-Monee School Board for Feb. 10, 2026

Crete-Monee School Board Meeting | Feb. 10, 2026 The Crete-Monee School District 201-U Board of Education Committee of the Whole met on Tuesday, February 10, 2026, to discuss future facility...
Advocate: Bipartisan support for IL CO2 pipeline eminent domain prohibition

Advocate: Bipartisan support for IL CO2 pipeline eminent domain prohibition

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A bipartisan effort is underway to eliminate the option of eminent domain for carbon dioxide pipelines in...
Screenshot 2026-02-18 at 2.18.35 PM

C-M Committee of Whole: Show Choir Spectacular Draws Record Crowds to Crete-Monee

Crete-Monee School Board Meeting | Feb. 10, 2026 Article Summary: Board members celebrated the success of the recent Show Choir Spectacular, which featured 18 teams and highlighted the district’s vibrant arts...
Judge confident in case against Illinois Supreme Court justices

Judge confident in case against Illinois Supreme Court justices

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A retired Cook County judge says he has great confidence in his case against justices of the...
Illinois Quick Hits: Pritzker wants tariffs refund after court ruling

Illinois Quick Hits: Pritzker wants tariffs refund after court ruling

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker says President Donald Trump owes the families of Illinois and the United States about...
Municipal League: Housing reform could strip authority from local communities

Municipal League: Housing reform could strip authority from local communities

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Illinois Municipal League says a new proposal for housing reform could allow the state to take...
Illinois Quick Hits: 15-year-old charged with machine gun possession

Illinois Quick Hits: 15-year-old charged with machine gun possession

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Two teens are facing weapons charges after Illinois State Police executed search warrants in Carbondale on Wednesday....
Screenshot 2026-02-18 at 2.04.09 PM

Trustees Approve Over $445,000 for Pond Restoration and Park Improvements

Monee Village Board Meeting | Feb. 11, 2026 Article Summary: The Village Board approved two significant infrastructure expenditures regarding the restoration of the Iris Lane West Pond and ongoing improvements at...
Illinois quick hits: Illinois Supreme Court sued over judge's removal

Illinois quick hits: Illinois Supreme Court sued over judge’s removal

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Illinois Supreme Court sued over judge's removal The Liberty Justice Center has filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against Illinois Supreme...
CPA gives tips for avoiding red flags for NGOs getting taxpayer money

CPA gives tips for avoiding red flags for NGOs getting taxpayer money

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A certified public accountant that works with nonprofits says if they’re getting public money, they should have...
Pritzker 'very disappointed' as Bears, Indiana move closer to stadium deal

Pritzker ‘very disappointed’ as Bears, Indiana move closer to stadium deal

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Chicago Bears are one step closer to leaving Illinois after an Indiana House committee approved stadium...