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June NFP Misses Big: US Job Growth Plunges to 57k
Abstract:June NFP Misses Big: US Job GrowthPlunges to 57kWall Street loves a quiet, long holiday weekend, but that was not in the cards this time. Just before the July 4th holiday, the US Bureau of Labor Stati
June NFP Misses Big: US Job GrowthPlunges to 57k
Wall Street loves a quiet, long holiday weekend, but that was not in the cards this time. Just before the July 4th holiday, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released a June
Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report that landed like a thunderbolt on trading desks. The official
data showed an addition of just 57,000 jobs, falling far short of the consensus forecast of
110,000 to 115,000. Economists were not just wrong—they were off by nearly half. For a
market that had spent the spring convinced that economic resilience justified a hawkish
stance, this print represents a genuine fracture in the prevailing narrative.
Negative Revisions: The Real Story Behind the Mirage
While news headlines chased the shocking June figure, the most critical indicator was buried in the historical revisions. The report slashed figures for both April and May by a combined
74,000 jobs. The initial May estimate of 172,000—a number that previously stoked inflation
fears—was quietly revised downward to 126,000. Similarly, April data was downgraded,
confirming that the slowdown was not a sudden event, but a persistent undercurrent.
Looking at the 3-month rolling average, it becomes clear that the "unstoppable labor
market" was merely a mirage built on statistical data that was constantly in need of
downward correction.
The Unemployment Puzzle: A Drop That Masks Worrying Trends
Here is the trap for the amateur observer: the headline unemployment rate ticked down
unexpectedly from 4.3% to 4.2%. Under normal conditions, this would be a reason for
celebration, but the household survey tells a different story. The number of employed
individuals actually shrank by half a million, while the labor force participation rate fell to
61.5% from 61.8%. This simply means that people are not finding jobs; instead, they are
giving up the search and exiting the labor force entirely, shrinking the "denominator" of the unemployment equation and artificially smoothing the final figure at the expense of
economic reality.
Sharp Sectoral Divergence: Healthcare Resists While Hospitality Retreats
Sectoral data reveals an unbalanced economy operating on a single engine. Private
Education and Healthcare Services continued to carry the heavy lifting, adding 69,000 jobs
to cushion the lackluster headline print. Conversely, the biggest shock came from Leisure
and Hospitality, which shed 61,000 jobs in a single month. This steep contraction raises
significant questions, especially as it coincides with the peak US summer travel season and World Cup events that analysts expected to support consumption. This retreat suggests that service-sector employers reacted quickly to the new reality, realizing that real-world demand failed to justify the over-hiring seen in May.
Market Repricing: How Commodities and Currencies Reacted to the Shock
The immediate reaction was swift and brutal as traders wiped out previous bets and rotated heavily into defensive assets:
Evaporated Rate Hike Bets: Prior to the report, markets were pricing in a hawkish
September hike driven by Chair Kevin Warshs rhetoric. However, the CME FedWatch tool
showed an immediate collapse in tightening expectations, with September hike probabilities falling from 63% to a coin-flip 51%.
Outright Dollar (DXY) Weakness: This shift reflected directly on the greenback; the Dollar
Index fell by 0.6% to trade near its lows at 100.70.
Strong Gains in Major Currencies: Conversely, the Euro (EUR/USD) jumped to a nine-day
high, nearing 1.1444, while the British Pound (GBP/USD) rallied toward the 1.3360 level.
Safe-Haven Gold & Silver Surge: Dollar weakness and falling bond yields opened the floodgates for precious metals; spot gold jumped over 2% to surpass the $4,100/oz mark, while
silver reclaimed its footing above $61/oz.
Equities Balanced Response: Stock markets absorbed the shock with a degree of balance, as index futures rose on the "bad data means less Fed pressure" logic.
Looking Ahead: What Should We Expect?
Markets are currently entering a critical phase of testing old paradigms. It is no longer
guaranteed that stocks will celebrate weak economic data; if growth indicators continue to
deteriorate through the summer, investor sentiment will quickly shift from celebrating
interest rate relief to panicking over a potential hard landing.
Furthermore, markets will closely monitor the annual benchmark revisions from the BLS later this year, which may reveal that the historical employment picture for 2026 was far weaker than previously believed.
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Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
