
US payrolls miss sharply, cooling rate-hike bets and dollar
American employers added only 57,000 jobs in June, half the forecast, while hospitality shed 61,000 positions despite the World Cup, prompting markets to slash expectations of imminent Federal Reserve tightening.
The US labour market delivered its weakest monthly gain of the year in June, with nonfarm payrolls rising by 57,000 against consensus estimates of 110,000–115,000. The Bureau of Labor Statistics also revised down the prior two months by a combined 74,000 jobs. The unemployment rate edged lower to 4.2 percent, but the decline was driven by a 0.3 percentage-point drop in labour-force participation to 61.5 percent, its lowest in more than five years, indicating that workers were leaving the job search rather than finding positions.
The report’s most striking detail was a 61,000-job contraction in leisure and hospitality, confounding expectations that the FIFA World Cup, co-hosted by the US, Canada and Mexico, would generate a hiring surge. Goldman Sachs had projected a 40,000-job boost from the tournament. Instead, the sector recorded its steepest monthly decline since 2020. Healthcare and social assistance continued to add roles, but manufacturing, retail and financial activities were flat. Average hourly earnings rose 3.5 percent year-on-year, trailing inflation by 0.7 percentage points, further squeezing real incomes.
Financial markets interpreted the data as reducing the urgency for the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates. The probability of a hike at the late-July meeting, as implied by fed funds futures, fell from around 33 percent to below 20 percent, and the odds of any move in September dropped from 64 percent to 52 percent. The dollar index slid 0.5 percent on Thursday, heading for its largest weekly loss since early April, while two-year Treasury yields snapped a three-day rise. On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose to a fresh record, but the Nasdaq Composite slipped for a second session as semiconductor shares gave back gains. European bourses accelerated after the data, with Frankfurt setting a record high, while Asian markets were choppy, with South Korea’s Kospi hit by tech losses.
Viewed from Washington, the numbers complicate the political narrative ahead of November’s midterm elections, where President Donald Trump’s Republicans face a stiff challenge. The administration’s reindustrialisation agenda has yet to translate into factory-floor hiring, and the energy-price shock from the US-Iran standoff continues to feed through to consumer prices. Analysts in London and New York noted that a single soft payrolls print is unlikely to alter the Fed’s broader focus on inflation, but it does shift attention back to the employment side of the central bank’s dual mandate. The next factual milestone is the Federal Open Market Committee’s policy announcement at the end of July, which will be parsed for any change in the balance of risks between price stability and labour-market strength.
| Atlantic / Anglosphere press | −0.20 | neutral |
|---|---|---|
| Latin American press | −0.30 | critical |
| Arab Gulf press | 0.00 | neutral |
| Continental European press | −0.40 | critical |
The number is a wake-up call for those betting on endless growth, but no reason to panic: the Fed has the tools to manage the phase.
The slowdown is normalized as a natural correction, avoiding dramatization and anchoring the narrative to institutional responsiveness.
The US slowdown is bad news for Latin America: fewer remittances, less exports, more volatility. Markets react by fleeing to gold.
The US figure is linked to local interests, turning a foreign statistic into a concrete risk for the region.
The US labor market slows, but for the Gulf what matters more is oil demand and the stability of local investments.
The impact of the US figure is minimized by shifting focus to variables considered more relevant for the regional economy.
The American model shows its cracks: fragile growth, inequalities, dependence on the Fed. Europe must look to itself.
The US data is used to question the superiority of the American economic model and legitimize a more independent European policy line.
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