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Jobs Up, Wages Down: Financial ETFs May Have Just Found Their Sweet Spot

Benzinga·05/09/2025 20:49:53
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The April U.S. employment report brought a welcome economic balancing act. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 177,000, beating comfortably the 130,000 forecast by economists and almost doubling the 90,000 predicted by Kalshi betting markets.

Average hourly earnings, however, slowed to 0.2% month-over-month from 0.3% in March, barely missing consensus forecasts.

The outcome? A tight labor market without overheating provides the Federal Reserve and markets a bit more room to breathe. For the financial sector in particular, an unusually favorable balance of stability and opportunity has emerged from the current conditions.

Also Read: Target’s Self-Checkout Flip-Flop Isn’t Helping After A 66% Value Crash: Are Retail ETFs Ringing Up The Real Risk?

ETF Watch: Who Wins?

With job growth still being maintained but wage pressures dissipating, a number of financial sector ETFs may ride the macro tailwinds:

Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSE:XLF)

The heavyweight of financial ETFs, XLF follows blue-chip stocks such as JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM), Wells Fargo & Co (NYSE:WFC), and Goldman Sachs Group Co. (NYSE:GS). Sectoral employment growth in financial activities (continued growth in April) indicates underlying strength, and subdued wage growth increases profitability and cools inflation risk, a net benefit to big banks with wide exposure.

SPDR S&P Bank ETF (NYSE:KBE)
Thie ETF provides equal-weighted exposure to large as well as regional banks. With the slower wage growth, consumer spending might be hit, forcing prices down (read: inflation). The Fed might consider continuing the pause, or even turn back on, rate increases. Regional banks could feel the boost of a rebound in loan demand and reduced funding costs.

Invesco KBW High Dividend Yield Financial ETF (NASDAQ:KBWD)
This ETF has a tilt toward high-yielding financials such as REITs and business development companies. Lower inflation expectations render its dividend-rich holdings more appealing in real terms, while decelerating wage inflation contributes to supporting payout sustainability.

Why This Labor Market Arrangement Works For Financials

The market response isn’t all about employment numbers, it’s about the “goldilocks” combination they generate.

  • Reduced Inflation Expectations: Slower wage growth typically means softer consumer spending, which then lowers inflationary pressure. That’s a good thing for banks, which rely on stable inflation to inform lending decisions and determine interest rate margins.
  • More Favorable Rate Outlook: If the Fed perceives wages moderating, it might delay further rate increases, or even begin lowering them. For banks, declining interest rates can fuel a flood of new consumer debt, mortgage requests and corporate loans — the stuff of bank profits.
  • Firming Corporate Margins: Slower wage growth equals lower input costs. That’s a good thing for banks, and any financial institution with exposure to corporate bonds or equity markets, too. Higher margins lower credit risk and increase investment returns.
  • Lower Labor Costs: Yes, even the financial industry experiences wage pressure. With labor expenses stabilizing, internal margins rise, providing CFOs and asset managers with more room to breathe.

The Macro Signal: Stability Without Stagnation

April’s figures indicate a labor market that’s strong in all the right areas. Health care, transportation, and finance created jobs, while government payrolls declined as it restructures. The unemployment rate remained at 4.2%, indicating labor demand remains robust, even as the Fed’s inflation battle slows the wage engine.

For investors, it is time to re-examine where the smart money goes next. With an economy that continues to grow but inflation retrenches, financial ETFs might be quietly positioning for outperformance — particularly those well-situated to profit from increasing credit activity, more stable margins, and leaner labor expenses.

The market did not roar following the jobs report — but it did not need to. For financials, a subtle beat might reverberate louder than any rally.

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Photo: NicoElNino via Shutterstock.com

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