dusk obs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026
#dusk $DUSK obs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026
As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData
The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending.
Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers
Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast:
• Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation.
• Professional and business services shed 97,000.
• Retail trade and construction saw declines in December.
• Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts.
This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors.
Broader Economic Context
2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026
As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData
The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending.
Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers
Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast:
• Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation.
• Professional and business services shed 97,000.
• Retail trade and construction saw declines in December.
• Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts.
This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors.
Broader Economic Context
2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026
As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData
The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending.
Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers
Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast:
• Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation.
• Professional and business services shed 97,000.
• Retail trade and construction saw declines in December.
• Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts.
This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors.
Broader Economic Context
2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
#dusk $DUSK US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026 As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending. Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast: • Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation. • Professional and business services shed 97,000. • Retail trade and construction saw declines in December. • Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts. This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors. Broader Economic Context 2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
#dusk $DUSK US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026 As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending. Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast: • Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation. • Professional and business services shed 97,000. • Retail trade and construction saw declines in December. • Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts. This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors. Broader Economic Context 2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
#dusk $DUSK US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026 As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending. Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast: • Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation. • Professional and business services shed 97,000. • Retail trade and construction saw declines in December. • Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts. This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors. Broader Economic Context 2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
#dusk $DUSK #dusk $DUSK US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026 As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending. Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast: • Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation. • Professional and business services shed 97,000. • Retail trade and construction saw declines in December. • Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts. This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors. Broader Economic Context 2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months.
#dusk $DUSK US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026 As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending. Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast: • Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation. • Professional and business services shed 97,000. • Retail trade and construction saw declines in December. • Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts. This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors. Broader Economic Context 2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
Правительство США может быть вынуждено вернуть более 200 миллиардов долларов, если Верховный суд решит, что тарифы Трампа незаконны в среду. Да-да — сотни миллиардов уже собранных средств могут быть немедленно возвращены импортерам, и это может серьезно потрясти рынки. внимательно следите за этими топовыми трендовыми монетами $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Официальные лица министерства финансов, однако, говорят, что у США есть средства для покрытия этих возвратов без напряжения, что означает, что экономика и рынки не рухнут из-за шока ликвидности. Для обычных американцев и бизнеса это может стать огромным импульсом для покупательной способности, поскольку снизятся торговые издержки и ослабнут инфляционные давления.
The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time. watch these top trending coins closely $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease. This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈 This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time. watch these top trending coins closely $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease. This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈 This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
#walrus $WAL The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time. watch these top trending coins closely $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease. This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈 This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
#walrus $WAL The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time. watch these top trending coins closely $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease. This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈 This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
#walrus $WAL The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time. watch these top trending coins closely $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease. This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈 This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
#walrus $WAL Правительство США может быть вынуждено вернуть более 200 миллиардов долларов, если Верховный суд постановит, что тарифы Трампа незаконны в среду. Да-да — сотни миллиардов уже собранных средств могут быть немедленно возвращены импортерам, и это может серьезно повлиять на рынки. Внимательно следите за этими топовыми трендовыми монетами $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Однако чиновники Министерства финансов говорят, что у США есть средства для покрытия этих возвратов без стресса, что означает, что экономика и рынки не рухнут из-за ликвидности. Для обычных американцев и бизнеса это может стать огромным стимулом для расходов, поскольку стоимость торговли снизится, а инфляционные давления ослабнут. Речь идет не только о тарифах — это структурный макроэкономический сдвиг. Трейдеры, инвесторы и крипторынки могут резко отреагировать. Если все будет сделано правильно, потенциальный кризис может превратиться в огромное положительное событие для рынков, но при неправильном управлении краткосрочная волатильность может резко возрасти. Время идет… Среда — день, на который стоит обратить внимание. 👀📈 Это экономическая неопределенность эпохи Трампа, разворачивающаяся в реальном времени, и всем следует прислушаться к этому.
#walrus $WAL The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time. watch these top trending coins closely $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease. This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈 This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
#CreatorPad Криптовалютный рынок демонстрирует признаки хрупкости после того, как $1 миллиард ликвидаций был спровоцирован неожиданным ростом Индекса цен производителей (PPI). Биткойн на короткое время упал ниже $112,000, когда трейдеры скорректировали свои позиции, в то время как ETF по Эфириуму увидели сильные притоки в размере $729 миллионов, несмотря на рыночную турбулентность. Чувствительность рынка к макроэкономическим индикаторам подчеркивает растущую корреляцию между крипто- и традиционными рынками. 💬 Как вы думаете, должны ли инвесторы изменить подход к управлению рисками, поскольку крипто начинает вести себя больше как традиционные рынки, или вы рассматриваете это скорее как возможность заработать на новых рыночных возможностях? 👉 Завершите ежедневные задачи в Центре задач, чтобы заработать баллы Binance: • Создайте пост, используя ##MarketTurbulence , • Поделитесь своим профилем трейдера, • Или поделитесь сделкой с помощью виджета, чтобы заработать 5 баллов! (Нажмите “+” на главной странице приложения Binance и выберите Центр задач)
#MarketTurbulence Криптовалютный рынок показывает признаки хрупкости после того, как $1 миллиард ликвидаций был вызван неожиданным ростом Индекса цен производителей (PPI). Биткойн на короткое время упал ниже $112,000, так как трейдеры корректировали свои позиции, в то время как ETF на Эфириум увидели сильные притоки в размере $729 миллионов, несмотря на рыночные колебания. Чувствительность рынка к макроэкономическим показателям подчеркивает растущую корреляцию между криптовалютами и традиционными рынками. 💬 Считаете ли вы, что инвесторы должны изменить подход к управлению рисками, поскольку криптовалюта ведет себя больше как традиционные рынки, или вы видите это скорее как возможность получить прибыль от новых рыночных возможностей? 👉 Выполняйте ежедневные задания в Центре задач, чтобы заработать очки Binance: • Создайте пост с использованием ##MarketTurbulence , • Поделитесь профилем вашего трейдера, • Или поделитесь сделкой, используя виджет, чтобы заработать 5 очков! (Нажмите “+” на главной странице приложения Binance и выберите Центр задач)
#CreatorPad Обновление Ралли Эфириума Эфириум (#ETH) в последнее время демонстрирует сильный импульс. Вот некоторые ключевые моменты о потенциальном #ETHRally: - *Недавнее Движение Цены*: Цена Эфириума значительно изменилась, текущая цена составляет $4,630.07 по состоянию на 12 августа 2025 года, что представляет собой увеличение на 7.85%. - *Уровни Поддержки и Сопротивления*: Эфириум удерживает сильную поддержку в пределах $2.7K-$2.76K с накоплением 2.1 миллиона ETH в этом диапазоне. Прорыв выше $2,800 может привести к движению к $3,000 и, возможно, выше. - *Институциональный Интерес*: Недавние покупки казначейства компаниями, такими как SharpLink Gaming, и крупные выводы со стороны маркетмейкеров, таких как Cumberland, могут вызвать ралли к $3K. - *Активность Сети*: Активность сети Эфириума растет, количество активных адресов достигло рекордного уровня в 17.4 миллиона в июне, а открытые обязательства по фьючерсам превысили $41 миллиард ¹ ² ³.