The US job market showed a softer side in April when just 175,000 jobs were added, marking one of the weakest months in the ...
US job growth in May was way stronger than the forecast.Nonfarm payrolls increased by 272,000.The US unemployment rate is no ...
U.S. job openings fell more than expected in April, pushing the number of available jobs per job-seeker to its lowest in ...
Forecasters expect the US employment report for May will add new evidence the labor market is gradually cooling, even as hiring rebounded compared to April.
The leisure and hospitality sector was the poster child of the employment devastation wreaked by the pandemic, losing half of its workforce (a whopping 8 million jobs) in two months. The March ...
The U.S. dollar jumped on Friday after data showed the world's largest economy created a lot more jobs than expected last ...
The Labor Department is expected to report Friday that employers added a healthy 233,000 jobs last month, down from a sizzling 303,000 in March but still a decidedly healthy total, according to a ...
Friday's report from the government did include some signs of a potential slowdown. The unemployment rate, for instance, ...
The American economy likely delivered another solid hiring gain in April, showing continuing durability in the face of the highest interest rates in two decades. The Labor Department is expected ...
The Labor Department is expected to report Friday that employers added a healthy 233,000 jobs last month, down from a sizzling 303,000 in March but still a […] ...
Today's main data event will be the US May Jobs Report. We expect nonfarm payrolls to have grown by 190k, a modest uptick from April when weak public sector jobs growth weighed on the headline figure.
As is typically the case, the first Friday of the month brings markets, and economists, their latest look at the health of the US labour market, with the April employment report set to round out ...