US employers added far more jobs than expected in January, delivering a rare upside surprise after months of subdued hiring and easing fears that the labor market was sliding into a prolonged slowdown.
Payrolls rose by 130,000 last month, significantly above economists’ expectations, while the unemployment rate edged down to 4.3%, according to government data released on Wednesday, with experts now expecting a pause on Fed rate cuts for now.
The figures compared with forecasts of roughly 55,000 to 65,000 new jobs and an unemployment rate of about 4.4%.
Alongside the headline surprise, annual benchmark revisions painted a much weaker picture of recent labour-market performance.
Updated estimates show that the US economy added just 181,000 jobs in 2025, sharply lower than the previously reported 584,000.
Even so, the stronger-than-anticipated report lifted market sentiment.
Futures tied to the S&P 500 climbed about 0.4%, while Nasdaq 100 futures also rose 0.4%.
Dow Jones Industrial Average futures advanced by 163 points, or about 0.3%, as investors reassessed the outlook for growth and interest rates.
The yield on the US 10-year Treasury note jumped nearly 5 bps to 4.19%.
A rebound after a fragile period
The better-than-expected data suggests the labour market may be emerging from an extended period of weakness driven by a combination of trade tensions, tighter immigration policy and federal job cuts.
Those factors had made employers cautious about expanding payrolls even as layoffs remained relatively limited.
The latest report also arrived against a backdrop of muted expectations.
In the days leading up to the release, several White House officials had signalled that job growth could come in weaker than consensus forecasts, shaping market positioning for a softer reading.
“We have to revise our expectations down significantly for what a monthly job number should look like,” White House senior trade advisor had told Fox News in a hint of low expectations and a bid to downplay the significance of the data set.
Seema Shah, Chief Global Strategist at Principal Asset Management, noted that today’s figures paint a resilient picture of the US labour market.
“While some have urged caution, Kevin Hassett’s ‘don’t panic’ caveat seems largely unnecessary in light of today’s jobs report,” Shah observed.
“This was not a weak print; it was a very strong one, even accounting for the noise likely embedded in the data.”
Healthcare-led gains in jobs while federal gov employment declined
Job gains were concentrated in a handful of sectors, highlighting uneven momentum across the economy.
Health care led the increase, adding 82,000 jobs in January, with strong gains in ambulatory health care services, hospitals and nursing and residential care facilities.
Construction and social assistance also posted notable increases.
By contrast, federal government employment continued to decline, falling by 34,000 as deferred resignations from 2025 continued to weigh on payrolls.
Since peaking in October 2024, federal government employment has fallen by more than 327,000, a drop of nearly 11%.
Employment in financial activities also declined, underscoring persistent pressure in parts of the services sector even as other industries expanded.
Revisions complicate the picture
Alongside the headline surprise, annual benchmark revisions painted a much weaker picture of recent labour-market performance.
Updated estimates show that the US economy added just 181,000 jobs in 2025, sharply lower than the previously reported 584,000.
The revisions underscore how fragile the hiring environment has been, even as January’s data points to a tentative improvement.
Economists said the combination of a stronger current reading and weaker historical data makes it harder to assess the true underlying momentum of the labour market.
At the same time, the broader labour-market indicators point to persistent slack.
Both the unemployment rate and the number of unemployed people changed little in January, with 7.4 million Americans out of work.
Long-term unemployment held steady at about 1.8 million but remained significantly higher than a year earlier, accounting for a quarter of all unemployed workers.
Case for a Fed rate cut looks thin
The January report is likely to influence the Federal Reserve’s policy debate as officials weigh the timing of further interest-rate cuts.
The stronger jobs data could give policymakers room to extend the pause in easing that began last month when the central bank meets again in March.
In recent weeks, Fed Chair Jerome Powell and other officials have described the labour market as stabilising, striking a more optimistic tone about the economic outlook.
The latest figures appear to support that narrative and may strengthen the hand of policymakers who are wary of easing too aggressively amid lingering inflation risks.
“The case for imminent Federal Reserve rate cuts looks thin,” said Shah.
“It will not be an easy task for Kevin Warsh to persuade the Federal Open Market Committee to ease policy at his first meeting: absent a clearer and sustained deceleration in inflation, the labour market will not make that case for him,” she said.
Susannah Streeter, Chief Investment Strategist, Wealth Club, echoed the view. The analyst said that the strong print has “dampened hopes slightly of a super‑easy path ahead for interest‑rate cuts.”
“Stocks focused on the broad health of the US economy are likely to see gains, while a more downbeat reaction may unfold for the tech sector already facing AI jitters,” Streeter added.
Participation and underemployment trends
The labor force participation rate remained at 62.5%, while the employment-population ratio held at 59.8%, showing little movement over the past year.
These stagnant metrics suggest that the labor market has not fully regained dynamism despite the headline increase in payrolls.
Underemployment offered a mixed signal.
The number of people working part time for economic reasons fell by 453,000 in January to 4.9 million, indicating some improvement in job quality, though the figure is still higher than a year earlier.
Teenage unemployment declined to 13.6%, while disparities across worker groups persisted, highlighting uneven progress across demographics.
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