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U.S. Private Sector Shed Most Jobs In Two Years Last Month
Forbesยท2025-10-01 13:55

Core Insights - Employment in the U.S. private sector declined by 32,000 jobs in September, indicating a faster-than-expected cooling of the job market [2][5] - This decline is the largest since March 2023 and is significantly below the Dow Jones consensus of an increase of 45,000 jobs [2][3] Employment Trends - Job losses were widespread across various industries, with notable declines in leisure and hospitality (19,000 jobs), professional and business services (13,000), transportation and utilities (7,000), and construction (5,000) [3] - Education and health services added 33,000 jobs, but overall job losses overshadowed this gain [3] Data Integrity Concerns - ADP reported a higher-than-normal number of missing or redacted values in the data set received from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which affected the granularity of the benchmark calculations [4] - The preliminary estimate from the QCEW suggested a record decline of 911,000 jobs over the 12 months ending in March [4] Federal Reserve Implications - The ADP report may be the last jobs data available to the Federal Reserve before its next meeting on October 28, with expectations of the unemployment rate remaining at 4.3% [5] - The Fed has indicated a weakening labor market, with rising unemployment and inflation above the 2% target influencing recent interest rate cuts [6] Consumer Sentiment - Consumer confidence regarding job availability has declined, with only 26.9% of consumers finding jobs to be "plentiful," the lowest since February 2021 [6] - There has been a significant drop in Americans' views of their current financial situation, marking the largest monthly decline since data collection began in 2022 [6]