The U.S. economy added fewer jobs in January than economists had forecast, although the jobless rate edged lower.
Economists had been expecting an overall healthy reading, with 169,000 net new jobs created in the month and the unemployment ...
The Labor Department on Friday released its jobs report for January, which showed that the U.S. economy added 143,000 jobs ...
US employers added 143,000 jobs in January and the unemployment rate dipped slightly, according to the Labor Department — ...
Annual revisions to jobs data and disruptions related to the catastrophic Los Angeles fires and severe winter storms are ...
U.S. employers added 143,000 jobs last month, somewhat fewer than forecast, while unemployment fell to 4 percent and hourly earnings rose.
Hiring slowed in January as U.S. employers added 143,000 jobs amid the Los Angeles wildfires, frigid weather across much of the nation and uncertainty generated by President Donald Trump’s trade ...
After a solid January jobs report, more traders are betting that the Fed’s rate-cut pause might not be so brief.
The U.S. labor market probably started 2025 the way it spent most of last year: generating decent, but unspectacular, job ...
While the headline number missed estimates, the January jobs report showed signs of strength investors think will keep rates ...
Employers added 143,000 jobs in January, below expectations, as gains came in the retail, health care and social assistance sectors, the Labor Department said on Friday. Economists had expected a ...
The economy picked up 143,000 jobs in January, a slower but solid pace to start the new year, even as the California fires and data revisions to employment figures weighed on the job gains.