New York: Wall Street may kick off the second half of the year with an uptick in volatility, thanks to the June jobs report and plenty of other market-moving data in a short trading week.

Financial markets will be closed on Friday for Independence Day. So Thursday will bring a blitz of numbers: the nonfarm payroll figures for June, the May trade deficit and the June index on the services sector from the Institute for Supply Management. On Wednesday, US Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen is scheduled to speak on financial stability at an International Monetary Fund conference in Washington.

The elevated volatility would shake some traders out of a stupor. They have been limited in their betting by this market, which has been resilient but boring: The S&P500 has not had a weekly swing of more than 2 per cent since mid-April.

“It has been a very frustrating few months in the market for both long-term and short-term traders. It is very tough to outperform in this environment,” said Sam Ginzburg, head of trading at First New York Securities in New York.

The S&P500 has scored 22 record closing highs for the first half of 2014, feeding concerns about a technical pullback. Yet the CBOE Volatility Index, Wall Street’s fear gauge, has hovered near multi-year lows, reflecting a market that seemed to grind higher no matter what was thrown at it.

“Markets will probably trade sideways or lower until the VIX gets to a higher level, where it can support some kind of (a meaningful) advance,” said Donald Selkin, chief market strategist at National Securities in New York, which has about $3 billion in assets under management.

The VIX is trading around 11, or about half of its long-term average of about 20. While no one would want to relive the financial crisis when the VIX jumped to 89.53 on Oct. 24, 2008, a modest amount of volatility is welcome on Wall Street.

A higher VIX creates valuation imbalances that drive stock picks and boost trading volume, which has collapsed from more than 8 billion shares a day in 2007 to an average of about 5 billion now.

For long-term investors, though, Wall Street is wrapping up a good first half of the year. The S&P500 has climbed 6.1 per cent this year, following a jump of 30 per cent in 2013.

A recent Reuters poll showed market participants expect the benchmark index to hit 2,000 for the first time before the year ends, which is a gain of about 8.2 per cent from 2013.

If the market closed the year at current levels, it would mark the best three-year run for US stocks since the 1997-1999 period.