The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported just 57,000 new jobs in June. Economists had expected double that.

US private sector job growth in June fell short of expectations, adding only 98,000 positions. This marks a slowdown from May's figures, with mixed industry performances. While…

ADP reports 98,000 private-sector jobs added in June 2026, missing the 113,000 forecast. What the softer labor market data means for Fed policy and crypto.

ADP reports US businesses added 98,000 jobs in June, missing forecasts and slowing from May. Here's what the cooling labor market means for crypto

Economists say June’s modest job gains point to a stagnant, low-hire labor market where people are continuing to have a hard time finding new jobs.

Wage growth is expected to tick slightly higher, but rising inflation has put pressure on real wage values.

The US economy added far fewer jobs than expected last month, with just 57,000 added in June, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data released Thursday.

Nonfarm payrolls were expected to rise by 115,000 in June while the unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%, according to the Dow Jones consensus.

The economy fell short of expectations in June, adding 57,000 jobs, fewer than most economists had expected.

US nonfarm payrolls added just 57,000 jobs in June 2026, missing forecasts by nearly half. Here's what the weak jobs report means for Fed rate cuts and

US employers added 57,000 jobs in June, falling short of forecasts. Here's what it means for the labor market and potential Federal Reserve actions.

June's payroll gains were much lower than the 100,000 new hires that economists had predicted.

Hiring lost momentum after months of surprising strength.

The U.S. added fewer new jobs in June than expected, while the unemployment rate ticked down, government data showed on Thursday, signaling the labor...

Economists expect stronger job growth to continue in 2026. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Thursday that the United States economy added 57,000 jobs in June, fewer than economists expected.

US job growth slowed sharply in June with employers adding just 57,000 jobs, according to data released by the US bureau of labor statistics. The slump came even as the…

Chief economists and CIOs sounded gloomy notes. LPL Financial's Jeffrey Roach calculated that 105.8 million Americans have left the labor market.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported just 57,000 new jobs in June. Economists had expected double that.

There’s no widespread layoffs, and the unemployment rate kicked down, but economists expected double the amount of new jobs added. Plus, wage growth, de-extinction, the “lump of…