The latest report released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics on January 9th shows that non-farm employment in December 2025 increased by only 50,000 jobs, well below market expectations of 60,000-73,000. More notably, previous data has been continuously revised downward: November was revised from 64,000 to 56,000, and October was significantly revised from -105,000 to -173,000, resulting in a total underreporting of 76,000 jobs over these two months.
Looking back at the year's performance, a total of 584,000 jobs were added in 2025, averaging only 49,000 per month. In comparison, the 2024 growth of 2 million jobs (monthly average of 168,000) highlights a significant gap. Economist Heather Long pointed out that this is the worst non-farm employment data performance since 2003.
At the industry level, performance varies significantly across sectors. The food and beverage industry remained relatively stable, adding 27,000 jobs; healthcare and social assistance increased by 38,000, with hospitals adding 21,000 and individual household services increasing by 17,000. The retail sector contracted, losing 25,000 jobs, with warehouse clubs, supercenters, and general merchandise retail declining by a total of 19,000. Major industries such as manufacturing, construction, finance, and professional services saw little to no growth.
Weak employment data is also reflected in the unemployment rate. Although the unemployment rate slightly decreased from the revised 4.5% to 4.4%, this change mainly results from shifts in labor force participation rather than genuine improvement in the job market. This data combination provides important macroeconomic insights for the market.
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DegenWhisperer
· 3h ago
Wait a minute, is the data being secretly altered again? This is exactly the "soft landing" the Federal Reserve wants, haha... The unemployment rate has dropped, but no one is actually finding jobs; people have simply given up looking. Economists say this is the worst in 22 years—can they still boast?
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GweiWatcher
· 3h ago
With such poor data, the unemployment rate is still decreasing. It's purely because people are leaving, right? I really can't hold on anymore.
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ETHReserveBank
· 3h ago
American data is once again unreliable; an average of 50,000 per month is not embarrassing enough, and major revisions are still needed. The phrase "worst since 2003" carries too much weight.
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GamefiGreenie
· 3h ago
Wait, in October, the correction was directly -170,000? The data is so inflated, it just keeps falling nonstop.
The latest report released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics on January 9th shows that non-farm employment in December 2025 increased by only 50,000 jobs, well below market expectations of 60,000-73,000. More notably, previous data has been continuously revised downward: November was revised from 64,000 to 56,000, and October was significantly revised from -105,000 to -173,000, resulting in a total underreporting of 76,000 jobs over these two months.
Looking back at the year's performance, a total of 584,000 jobs were added in 2025, averaging only 49,000 per month. In comparison, the 2024 growth of 2 million jobs (monthly average of 168,000) highlights a significant gap. Economist Heather Long pointed out that this is the worst non-farm employment data performance since 2003.
At the industry level, performance varies significantly across sectors. The food and beverage industry remained relatively stable, adding 27,000 jobs; healthcare and social assistance increased by 38,000, with hospitals adding 21,000 and individual household services increasing by 17,000. The retail sector contracted, losing 25,000 jobs, with warehouse clubs, supercenters, and general merchandise retail declining by a total of 19,000. Major industries such as manufacturing, construction, finance, and professional services saw little to no growth.
Weak employment data is also reflected in the unemployment rate. Although the unemployment rate slightly decreased from the revised 4.5% to 4.4%, this change mainly results from shifts in labor force participation rather than genuine improvement in the job market. This data combination provides important macroeconomic insights for the market.