The labor market is sending signals of "neither hot nor cold."
In December, ADP private sector added 41,000 jobs, a significant rebound from the decline of 29,000 in November, but still below market expectations of around 50,000. Why is this result called "just right"? Because it hits both ends: the strength is enough to scare off inflation concerns and make people afraid of rate cuts, while the weakness hasn't pushed the economy into a recession story.
Looking at industry distribution, the growth mainly comes from the service sector. Education, healthcare, hotels, and leisure—these livelihood-related sectors—supported the economy at year-end, but professional business services declined noticeably, information technology is laying off, manufacturing remains sluggish, and construction has only marginally improved. In other words, not the entire labor market is heating up, but rather it’s struggling to maintain during the transition of economic momentum.
Wage performance is even more interesting. The annual wage increase for employed workers remains at 4.4%, while those switching jobs can get up to 6.6%. What does this indicate? Frontline workers still have room to negotiate wages, but the wage spiral that the Fed fears most hasn't restarted; companies are more inclined to precisely fill positions rather than blindly expand their workforce.
For the Federal Reserve, this report is more like a "maintain the status quo" chip rather than pressure to change course. The official rate path expects rate cuts only by 2026—this set of employment data actually reinforces that outlook.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
23 Likes
Reward
23
8
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
HodlOrRegret
· 01-11 07:13
Another set of "just right" data... The Federal Reserve is probably playing with fire; interest rate cuts are still a long way off.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-4745f9ce
· 01-11 04:59
The employment data is once again in this "close enough" tone, and the Federal Reserve is thrilled.
View OriginalReply0
SandwichVictim
· 01-11 00:15
Uh, it's that "just right" again. The Federal Reserve is really something. I just want to drag it out until 2026...
View OriginalReply0
MainnetDelayedAgain
· 01-08 08:00
According to the database, another "just right" delay notification has been sent. The rebound of 41,000 people did not exceed expectations, and the promise of a rate cut in 2026... it's been nearly a year since the last commitment. It is recommended to be recorded in the Guinness World Records.
View OriginalReply0
PrivateKeyParanoia
· 01-08 07:47
Ah, this is the classic case of "giving neither hope nor despair," the Federal Reserve's favorite.
View OriginalReply0
MetaLord420
· 01-08 07:42
Employment data "just right"? Sounds like the Fed is going to keep dragging its feet again. Cutting interest rates only in 2026 is really outrageous.
View OriginalReply0
GoldDiggerDuck
· 01-08 07:36
It's that "just right" again, tired of hearing it... The Federal Reserve just loves to play this game, with the economy being neither alive nor dead, it's even harder for retail investors.
View OriginalReply0
OnchainDetectiveBing
· 01-08 07:32
Tech layoffs are so fierce, the service industry is holding on hard, it feels a bit contradictory.
The labor market is sending signals of "neither hot nor cold."
In December, ADP private sector added 41,000 jobs, a significant rebound from the decline of 29,000 in November, but still below market expectations of around 50,000. Why is this result called "just right"? Because it hits both ends: the strength is enough to scare off inflation concerns and make people afraid of rate cuts, while the weakness hasn't pushed the economy into a recession story.
Looking at industry distribution, the growth mainly comes from the service sector. Education, healthcare, hotels, and leisure—these livelihood-related sectors—supported the economy at year-end, but professional business services declined noticeably, information technology is laying off, manufacturing remains sluggish, and construction has only marginally improved. In other words, not the entire labor market is heating up, but rather it’s struggling to maintain during the transition of economic momentum.
Wage performance is even more interesting. The annual wage increase for employed workers remains at 4.4%, while those switching jobs can get up to 6.6%. What does this indicate? Frontline workers still have room to negotiate wages, but the wage spiral that the Fed fears most hasn't restarted; companies are more inclined to precisely fill positions rather than blindly expand their workforce.
For the Federal Reserve, this report is more like a "maintain the status quo" chip rather than pressure to change course. The official rate path expects rate cuts only by 2026—this set of employment data actually reinforces that outlook.