News

The June jobs report cratered the odds for a July rate cut. Stocks cheered the strong data but dimmer rate-cut views ...
Headline numbers from the June jobs report took pressure off the Federal Reserve to consider an interest-rate cut later this month, likely leaving the central bank on hold at least until the fall.
The U.S. added a decent 147,000 jobs in June that pointed to resilience in the labor market, but the pace of hiring has slowed since last year as businesses grapple with trade wars and an immigration ...
The U.S. economy added 147,000 jobs in June, beating analyst expectations, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported.
U.S. retail sales rebounded more than expected in June, suggesting a modest improvement in economic activity and giving the ...
US employers added 147,000 jobs last month, and the jobless rate edged down to 4.1 per cent, leading traders to dial back ...
The economy added 147,000 nonfarm payroll jobs last month, topping the Dow Jones consensus of 110,000, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.1%, better ...
Nonfarm payrolls for June and ISM reports on manufacturing and services will give insights into U.S. economic growth. Meantime, Republicans are rushing to get the tax-and-spending megabill to ...
The Fed and most Wall Street economists expect the jobless rate to creep higher in 2025. Forecasters predict a slight increase in June to 4.3% if more graduates than expected enter the labor force ...
Solid Jobs Report Keeps Fed Rate Cuts at Bay. The latest labor market data reinforces the central bank’s wait-and-see approach to lowering borrowing costs, despite pressure from President Trump.
Economic Report June jobs report could decide the next Fed interest-rate cut. Here’s why. June’s jobs numbers will arrive a day early due to the Fourth of July holiday ...