Jobs Report January 2025:


The US economy added just 143,000 jobs in January, but the unemployment rate fell to 4%

Job creation was lower than expected in January, but unemployment rates fell and workers’ wages rose sharply, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on Friday.

Non-farm salaries It climbed to a seasonally adjusted 143,000, down from 307,000, which was revised upward in December, to a seasonally adjusted 143,000, below the Dow Jones forecast of 169,000. The unemployment rate fell to 4%.

The report also saw significant benchmark revisions to the 2024 total, showing a significant downward change to previous pay levels, but those who report retaining employment were upwards. A revision has been made.

The annual revisions made by BLS have reduced employment by 589,000 in 12 months since March 2024. In August 2024, preliminary adjustments showed 818,000 jobs.

As calculated in the household survey, the level of people reporting in the workplace increased by 2.23 million cases, a product of annual adjustments to the country’s population and immigration. The household survey is conducted separately from the establishment survey, which is used to tally total employment.

Job growth in January was centered on healthcare (44,000), retail (34,000) and government (32,000). The total profit for the month had slightly reduced its average of 166,000 in 2024, according to BLS. Social aid added 22,000, while mining industries lost 8,000.

In addition to the upward revision of December count, BLS increased its November total to 261,000, a change of 49,000. In two months, we saw 100,000 upward revisions.

Unemployment rates have been lower as workforce participation increases, rising to 62.6%, up 0.1 percentage points from December. The broader measures, including discouraged workers and workers who hold part-time employment for financial reasons, were stable at 7.5%.

Although employment profits were curtailed, wages rose more than expected. The average hourly return ratio increased by 0.5% and 4.1% over a month compared to the 0.3% and 3.7% estimates, respectively.

The market showed little response to the report Stock market futures Flats and around the Treasury will bring about higher yields.

“The January salary figures, lower than January, were offset by an upward revision to the November and December totals and a lower unemployment rate,” said Erenzentner, chief economic strategist at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management. states. “People who wanted a soft report that would bring the Fed back to rate cut mode didn’t get it.”

The report is the first number of jobs since the president Donald Trump On January 20th, he took office with a plan to level the global playing field for trade by cutting taxes, spurring growth and slapping heavy tariffs on the largest US trading partner.

Federal Reserve officials are looking at numbers carefully as they consider the next monetary policy move. The Fed completely cut its benchmark rates in late 2024, but policymakers have recently advocated a more cautious pace when assessing policy impact.

According to futures prices measured by CME Group, the market will be on hold until at least June, with a second cut of around 50-50 chances.

Some economists expected California wildfires to reduce the number of jobs, but the department said they had “no identifiable effect” on the total.

Adjusted: Unemployment rate fell to 4% in January. Previous version headlines misrepresented the movement.

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