U.S. jobs market cools in June

The latest U.S. jobs report underscored a clear cooling in labour market momentum, with June’s 2026 nonfarm payrolls rising by just 57,000, well below economists’ expectations and marking the weakest gain in four months.

And this despite an expected job boost as the U.S. hosts a highly successful record-breaking Football World Cup.

Although the headline unemployment rate dipped to 4.2%, this improvement was largely cosmetic: the labour force participation rate fell to 61.5%, its lowest level since March 2021, meaning fewer people were counted as actively seeking work.

Beneath the surface, the household survey painted a more troubling picture. Employment dropped sharply, with 507,000 fewer people reporting they were at work, and revisions to earlier months erased 74,000 previously reported jobs — undercutting the narrative of springtime strength.

Leisure and hospitality suffered a notable setback, shedding 61,000 positions, while gains were concentrated in a narrow band of sectors: professional and business services (+36,000), social assistance (+25,000), and healthcare (+22,000).

Financial markets reacted cautiously, with investors trimming expectations of a Federal Reserve rate rise in September 2026.

Overall, the data reportedly suggests a labour market losing steam, shaped more by statistical quirks and workforce exits than by genuine economic resilience.

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