The Transition from "Data Trading" to "Trend Trading"
In the past couple of years, a clear market characteristic has emerged: extreme sensitivity to individual data points. A single employment report can cause significant asset price fluctuations. However, this "data trading" pattern often appears near policy turning points. Disappointing non-farm payrolls reinforce a narrative: economic momentum is slowing, and the tightening cycle is nearing its end. The problem is, this market narrative has been traded multiple times, and its marginal impact is diminishing. In other words, single data releases are increasingly unlikely to change the medium-term trend. What truly determines the direction is continuity. If employment, inflation, and consumption weaken simultaneously over the next few months, that would be a trend signal; if it's just monthly fluctuations, it's more likely noise. Sophisticated investors pay more attention to structural changes, such as vacancy rates, labor participation rates, and wage growth, rather than headline numbers. Because economic turning points are often hidden within structural indicators. The market will eventually shift from "focusing on data" back to "watching the cycle." Non-farm payrolls are just one piece of the puzzle, not the whole picture. #小非农数据不及预期
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The Transition from "Data Trading" to "Trend Trading"
In the past couple of years, a clear market characteristic has emerged: extreme sensitivity to individual data points. A single employment report can cause significant asset price fluctuations. However, this "data trading" pattern often appears near policy turning points.
Disappointing non-farm payrolls reinforce a narrative: economic momentum is slowing, and the tightening cycle is nearing its end. The problem is, this market narrative has been traded multiple times, and its marginal impact is diminishing. In other words, single data releases are increasingly unlikely to change the medium-term trend.
What truly determines the direction is continuity. If employment, inflation, and consumption weaken simultaneously over the next few months, that would be a trend signal; if it's just monthly fluctuations, it's more likely noise.
Sophisticated investors pay more attention to structural changes, such as vacancy rates, labor participation rates, and wage growth, rather than headline numbers. Because economic turning points are often hidden within structural indicators.
The market will eventually shift from "focusing on data" back to "watching the cycle." Non-farm payrolls are just one piece of the puzzle, not the whole picture. #小非农数据不及预期