The US Labour Department is set to release closely watched employment data on Wednesday, offering the first indication of whether job growth in 2026 is gaining momentum after a year marked by the weakest hiring pace outside of a recession in more than two decades.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics will publish the January jobs report at 8:30 a.m. ET, slightly later than usual due to a brief government shutdown.
The figures are expected to shed light on whether the labor market has emerged from what economists describe as a low-hire, low-fire environment, where employers have been reluctant to expand payrolls but also hesitant to lay off workers.
Last year, the US economy recorded its weakest pace of job growth outside of a recession since 2003.
The year ended with employers adding about 50,000 jobs in December, roughly in line with the average monthly gain for 2025, while unemployment dipped to 4.4%.
Expectations point to modest improvement
Economists surveyed by Bloomberg forecast that US employers added about 65,000 jobs in January, the largest monthly gain in four months, while the unemployment rate is expected to remain steady at 4.4%.
The Dow Jones consensus estimate is slightly lower, at 55,000 jobs, compared with a gain of 50,000 in December.
Even those projections highlight how subdued hiring has become.
Analysts broadly agree that the number of new jobs required each month to keep unemployment stable has declined, partly because of tighter immigration policies that have slowed labour-force growth.
In addition to the headline numbers, economists are also preparing for annual revisions to employment data.
Bloomberg economist Anna Wong said adjustments to statistical models used by the BLS could reduce future payroll estimates by roughly 20,000 jobs per month, potentially reshaping perceptions of labor-market strength over the past year.
White House seeks to manage expectations ahead of release
Top officials in the administration have sought to temper expectations ahead of the release, arguing that slower job growth does not necessarily signal economic weakness.
“We have to revise our expectations down significantly for what a monthly job number should look like,” Peter Navarro, the president’s top trade adviser, said in an interview on Fox Business.
While he said he was not expecting a weak report, Navarro suggested that sub-100,000 monthly job gains should no longer be viewed as alarming.
Kevin Hassett, another senior economic adviser, echoed that message in comments on CNBC, pointing to immigration restrictions, the spread of artificial intelligence and broader economic trends as factors likely to dampen hiring.
He said these forces could lead to “slightly smaller job numbers”, an outlook that markets appear to have already factored in.
Markets factoring in a weaker data set
Financial markets were positioning for a softer-than-consensus reading ahead of the report.
“The market is really poised for that labor market data to come in weaker,” said Rufaro Chiriseri, head of fixed income at RBC Wealth Management.
If payroll growth undershoots expectations, she said, the yield on the 10-year Treasury could fall toward 4%, a level last seen in late November.
Treasury yields edged lower in early trading on Wednesday.
The 10-year yield slipped to around 4.13%, its lowest level in five weeks, while the two-year yield, which is more sensitive to monetary policy expectations, hovered near 3.45%.
Equity futures ticked higher as investors awaited the data.
Futures linked to the S&P 500 rose about 0.1%, Nasdaq 100 futures gained roughly 0.2%, and Dow Jones Industrial Average futures advanced modestly, suggesting cautious optimism among traders.
Implications for Fed’s interest rate decision
The labor market has become a central variable in shaping expectations for US interest rates this year.
“The labor market appears to hold the key to the path of rates,” said Brendan Murphy, head of fixed income for North America at Insight Investment.
UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo said that confirmation of slower job creation could strengthen the case for additional monetary easing.
“Expectation of a slowdown in job additions in the US – to be confirmed later today – is supporting the case that the Fed can continue to cut interest rates this year,” he said.
According to CME Group’s FedWatch tool, investors are currently pricing in at least two 25-basis-point rate cuts in 2026, underscoring how sensitive rate expectations have become to labor-market data.
Whether January marks a turning point or simply an extension of the recent slowdown will shape the narrative for the months ahead.
For policymakers, investors and businesses alike, the data will provide an early test of whether the US labor market can regain momentum—or whether the era of modest, fragile job growth is becoming the new normal.
The post US jobs report to be released today: here’s what to expect appeared first on Invezz