Private sector payroll growth is cooling notably. December's three-month average hit just +29K, a sharp pullback from November's initially reported +75K—even after revisions bumped November to +52K, the deceleration remains stark.
Looking at the broader picture, the six-month average tells a similar story. It sits at +43K in December versus November's originally reported +44K, though with all the post-revision adjustments factored in, November's figure came down to +32K. The trend here is unmistakable: employment gains in the private sector are losing momentum.
This slowdown in job creation carries weight for markets watching Fed policy moves and recession signals. Weaker payroll data historically fuels speculation around rate cuts and liquidity shifts, making this a key datapoint for traders across all asset classes, crypto included.
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EntryPositionAnalyst
· 01-09 18:19
With such fake employment data, we still have to rely on the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates to save the day, right?
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DegenWhisperer
· 01-09 18:11
Employment data has collapsed again; now the Fed probably has to consider cutting interest rates.
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DefiEngineerJack
· 01-09 18:08
actually™ the revisions tell the real story here—those +75K→+52K swings show how cooked traditional macro data really is, no wonder we need on-chain transparency lol
Reply0
OneBlockAtATime
· 01-09 18:06
Private companies' hiring has cooled down. Once this data is out, the crypto circle will probably start hyping about interest rate cuts again.
View OriginalReply0
SigmaValidator
· 01-09 17:54
Employment data underwhelms, and rate cut expectations are back. Can we stop with the false hopes again?
Private sector payroll growth is cooling notably. December's three-month average hit just +29K, a sharp pullback from November's initially reported +75K—even after revisions bumped November to +52K, the deceleration remains stark.
Looking at the broader picture, the six-month average tells a similar story. It sits at +43K in December versus November's originally reported +44K, though with all the post-revision adjustments factored in, November's figure came down to +32K. The trend here is unmistakable: employment gains in the private sector are losing momentum.
This slowdown in job creation carries weight for markets watching Fed policy moves and recession signals. Weaker payroll data historically fuels speculation around rate cuts and liquidity shifts, making this a key datapoint for traders across all asset classes, crypto included.