The January employment report brought something that hasn’t exactly been in short supply lately: a bit of confusion. The ...
Friday’s report provided evidence of slowing expansion. The 143,000 jobs added would be the weakest January total since 2016.
January employment report - strong overall despite slower nonfarm payroll gains for the month. Read more here.
The US economy kicked off 2025 by adding 143,000 jobs in January, fewer than expected; but the unemployment rate dipped to 4%, according to data released Friday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Read here for a roundup of various reactions to the U.S. January nonfarm payrolls report from Seeking Alpha analysts and ...
Friday's job numbers may not be what you expect. The report is likely to show slower job growth from last year due to a regular update to the government's data — likely among the biggest payroll ...
The latest jobs numbers from January came out Friday. They show the economy added 143,000 jobs and unemployment declined from ...
Employment declined in the mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction industries. The Labor Bureau released the monthly report on Friday morning. Consumer Inflation Expectations Surge In New ...
The first jobs report since President Donald Trump’s inauguration came out Friday morning, falling short of headline expectations in the weakest start to a year for overall job growth since ...
Bond yields shot up on Friday as markets took in the January jobs report. While the nonfarm payroll report showed employers added fewer jobs than expected last month, traders dialed up bets that ...
Economists were projecting the unemployment rate would stay at 4.1% and 170,000 jobs would be added, according to FactSet estimates. Friday’s report — which also featured some significant data ...