But first a bit of background: The numbers in Friday’s jobs report most likely will change in the months (and years) to come.
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 ...
“Near-real-time data like the jobs report later get revised to match other data sources that are more accurate but take longer to collect and publish.” The revisions being released on Friday ...
Friday’s report provided evidence of slowing expansion. The 143,000 jobs added would be the weakest January total since 2016.
The U.S. labor market likely began 2025 in solid fashion, in a bit of a step down from where it closed the previous year.
The January jobs report comes as investors are closely watching for any clues about whether or not the Federal Reserve will ...
While the headline number missed estimates, the January jobs report showed signs of strength investors think will keep rates ...
On Friday at 8:30 a.m. ET, the Bureau of Labor Statistics will release the January jobs report; and, by and large, economists expect that job gains continued to slow to pre-pandemic norms but ...
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 ...
If the pundits proved right, the US labor market was supposed to have broken down by now. It wasn’t supposed to survive the Federal Reserve’s historic and aggressive rate-hiking campaign to ...