Key Takeaways
- US non-farm payrolls added 218,000 jobs in June, well above the consensus estimate of 185,000.
- The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above 42,000 for the first time, up 1.8% on the day.
- Market breadth remains concerning: only approximately 40% of S&P 500 stocks are trading above their 200-day moving average.
- The strong jobs data reduces the probability of a September Fed rate cut, which Fed Funds futures now price at 38%, down from 55% pre-report.
Friday’s June employment report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics delivered a significant upside surprise, sending the Dow Jones Industrial Average above the psychologically important 42,000 level for the first time in history. Non-farm payrolls added 218,000 jobs against a consensus expectation of 185,000, the unemployment rate held at 4.1%, and average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month all reading as Goldilocks from an equity market perspective: strong enough to suggest continued economic expansion, but not so hot as to rekindle inflation fears dramatically.
Breaking Down the Jobs Report
The sector composition of June job gains was broadly healthy. Health Care and Social Assistance added 45,200 jobs, continuing its role as the most consistent driver of US employment growth. Government added 38,000 jobs. Leisure and Hospitality added 32,000 jobs, suggesting the consumer services sector remains robust. Construction added 28,000 jobs, and Professional and Business Services added 22,000 the latter a key leading indicator for corporate capital spending intentions.
Manufacturing, notably, shed 4,000 jobs a sign that the sector’s weakness persists despite broader economic resilience. The goods-producing sector more broadly was flat on the month, with job gains concentrated in the service economy. This dynamic strong services, weak manufacturing has been the persistent pattern of the 2024-2026 expansion and helps explain why the Fed’s disinflation challenge is primarily concentrated in services inflation rather than goods.
The Breadth Problem: A Market Held Up by the Few
Despite the celebratory mood around the Dow’s 42,000 milestone, sophisticated market observers are watching breadth data with concern. The advance-decline line for the S&P 500 has been diverging from the price index since mid-May, with more stocks declining than advancing even as the index has moved higher. The percentage of S&P 500 members trading above their 200-day moving average is approximately 40% a historically low reading for an index near all-time highs.
This breadth divergence is a classic warning signal in technical analysis. When an index is driven higher by a small number of large-cap names while the majority of constituent stocks underperform, the rally is considered fragile. The 52-week high/low ratio confirms this picture: new 52-week lows have exceeded new 52-week highs on several trading sessions in June, even as the headline index advanced. This is unusual behavior at all-time highs and suggests that the rally is more narrow and concentrated than the headline Dow number implies.
Canadian Perspective: Managing US Equity Exposure
For Canadian investors, the Dow’s 42,000 milestone is a useful moment to reassess US equity exposure sizing. Broad-market S&P 500 index funds (XSP, VFV, ZSP) have delivered strong returns for Canadians over the past decade, and the case for maintaining core US equity exposure remains intact. However, given the breadth concerns and elevated valuations, adding to US equity at current levels carries more risk than it did a year ago. Investors who are meaningfully overweight US equities relative to their target allocation might use this rally as an opportunity to rebalance.
| Month | NFP (000s) | Consensus (000s) | Beat/Miss | Unemployment Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 2026 | 198 | 175 | +23K | 4.0% |
| February 2026 | 142 | 160 | -18K | 4.1% |
| March 2026 | 210 | 185 | +25K | 4.1% |
| April 2026 | 176 | 180 | -4K | 4.1% |
| May 2026 | 188 | 175 | +13K | 4.1% |
| June 2026 | 218 | 185 | +33K | 4.1% |
The Bottom Line
The Dow’s 42,000 milestone is a legitimate market milestone driven by a genuinely strong jobs report, but investors would be wise not to read it as an all-clear signal. The underlying breadth of the US equity market remains troublingly narrow, and the employment data that sent stocks higher also reduces the probability of near-term Fed rate cuts that have been part of the bull case. Disciplined Canadian investors should celebrate the milestone while remaining attentive to the divergence between the headline index and the performance of most individual stocks.