Capital Wealth Capital Wealth Client Login
Home Intelligence Portfolios Annuities
Planning
Planning Overview Pension Maximization 403(b) for Teachers 401(k) Planning Cash Balance & DB Plans Police / Fire & County Safety Federal, Postal & Nurses Social Security Timing Sequence of Returns Modern Portfolio Theory Life Insurance Long-Term Care & ADLs Medicare & Retiree Health Estate Planning Tax-Efficient Withdrawal 2026 Tax Guide
Advanced Planning
Executive Compensation Oil & Gas Sector Canadian Cross-Border Calculators Services About Client Login
FRI CLOSE · JUN 5, 2026  |  DJIA 50,866.78 ▼ 1.35% (-695.15)  ·  S&P 500 ▼ 1.3%  ·  NASDAQ ▼ sharp, chip-led  ·  10Y TREAS 4.537%  ·  GOLD $4,337.10 ▼ $138.70  ·  EURO $1.1522  ·  YEN 160.32  |  MAY JOBS STRONG — CUTS PRICED OUT  |  CAPITAL WEALTH WEEKEND EDITION  | 
Specialty · The Economy

Hiring Gathers Steam — And Wall Street Hates It.

The May jobs report came in strong — solid payroll gains and a labor market that refuses to roll over.

Based on WSJ reporting · Capital Wealth analysis by Sean Anees Saifi · June 6, 2026
A hiring sign in a shop window on a busy street.
A hiring sign in a shop window on a busy street.

The Story

The May jobs report came in strong — solid payroll gains and a labor market that refuses to roll over. On any normal day that's good news. On Friday it was the opposite: the Dow fell 695 points (−1.35%) and the chip-heavy Nasdaq led a sharp slide, because a hot labor market is the surest way to push the Federal Reserve's rate cuts further out.

What This Means For The Book

This is the world we're in: good news for Main Street is bad news for the stock market, at least in the moment. I don't trade those moments. A strong jobs market keeps consumers spending and keeps the companies we own earning; the re-pricing of rate cuts is noise we've already built the book to withstand.

Themes In This Article

For reference. Not a recommendation. See Capital Wealth Model Portfolios.

Q2 Review — 15 Minutes, Phone Or Zoom

Bring your statement; we translate the headline into a position-level decision.

Book Q2 Review →View Portfolios →