News

The labor market may show signs of cooling, but a mixed week of employment data — and a warm wage growth reading — shows that yet again, the Fed can afford to wait.
Employers across the U.S. added 139,000 jobs in May while the nation's unemployment rate remained at 4.2%, new data shows.
The U.S. added 139,000 jobs in May and the jobless rate held steady at 4.2 percent, according to data released Friday by the Labor Department. The May jobs report showed the U.S. economy keeping ...
ToplineThe U.S. labor market exhibited signs of relative strength in May, according to the Labor Department’s monthly jobs ...
The government’s May jobs report, slated for release at 8:30 a.m. ET Friday, could reveal the first signs of the impact on American workers of President Donald Trump’s ...
The Bureau of Labor Statistics is scheduled to release its monthly jobs report on Friday, and investors will be watching ...
The big rally in bitcoin and stocks over the past eight weeks has occurred with a (somewhat) hawkish Fed; a dovish turn could provide fuel for new legs higher.
The jobless claims figure spiked to an eight-month high as President Donald Trump urges the Federal Reserve to make a move.
Unemployment claims rose to their highest level in eight months, with more workers across the Northeast filing for benefits ...
Markets brace for the upcoming nonfarm payrolls report as new labor data signals a potential economic slowdown. What should ...
ADP has released its estimate of private sector employment in May. The net number of new jobs was 37,000, a third of the ...
Economists expect that the May jobs report could point to a softening labor market as hiring continues to slow amid economic ...