The weakest payrolls print in over three years raises the odds the Federal Reserve will cut rates as soon as September.
The weakest payrolls print in over three years raises the odds the Federal Reserve will cut rates as soon as September.

The weakest payrolls print in over three years raises the odds the Federal Reserve will cut rates as soon as September.
The US economy added 54,000 nonfarm jobs in June, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Thursday, sharply undershooting the consensus estimate of 95,000 and marking the smallest monthly gain since early 2023. The unemployment rate edged down to 4.2% from 4.3% in May, while average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, in line with expectations.
"The labor market is cooling faster than the Fed anticipated, and this print removes any remaining urgency to hold rates steady," said James Knightley, chief international economist at ING. "The question is no longer whether they cut, but how quickly."
May's headline gain was revised down to 157,000 from the initially reported 172,000, while April was revised to 171,000 from 179,000, bringing the three-month average to roughly 127,000 — well below the 188,000 pace recorded through May. Private-sector payrolls added just 48,000 jobs in June, with government hiring contributing only 6,000 after a 52,000 surge the prior month. The labor force participation rate held at 62.5%.
The data represents a material downshift from the first five months of the year, when payrolls averaged 215,000 per month. The June miss was the largest relative to consensus since December 2020, when the economy was still emerging from the pandemic recession. The US Dollar Index fell as much as 0.6% immediately after the release before paring losses, while the 2-year Treasury yield dropped 12 basis points to 4.18% as traders priced in a higher probability of rate cuts. The S&P 500 opened 0.4% higher on the expectation of easier monetary policy.
What the data means for the Fed
The June report breaks the pattern of resilient hiring that had characterized the first half of 2026. Forward-looking indicators had already signaled softness: the ISM manufacturing employment index contracted to 48.6 in May, while the services employment gauge fell to 47.9 — both below the 50 threshold that separates expansion from contraction. JOLTS data for April showed hires falling to 5.1 million, the lowest level since early 2024, even as layoffs remained historically low at 1.7 million.
"The low-hire, low-fire equilibrium is breaking to the downside," said Sarah House, senior economist at Wells Fargo. "Employers are not laying off aggressively, but they have stopped adding headcount in any meaningful way."
Fed funds futures now imply a 68% probability of a 25-basis-point rate cut at the September 17-18 Federal Open Market Committee meeting, up from 42% before the release. A cut in July remains unlikely, with implied odds below 15%, but the December meeting is fully priced for at least one quarter-point reduction. The last time the Fed cut rates was in September 2024, when it delivered a 50-basis-point reduction to begin the easing cycle.
Cross-asset reaction and the dollar's short-lived drop
The dollar's initial selloff proved short-lived, with the DXY recovering to trade down just 0.2% by mid-session. EUR/USD rose to 1.0920 before settling near 1.0890, while GBP/USD touched 1.2780 before retreating. USD/CAD fell to 1.3620 as the Canadian dollar gained on the broad dollar weakness. The muted follow-through suggests traders are waiting for additional confirmation — particularly the July CPI report due Aug. 13 — before committing to a sustained dollar downtrend.
"The market wants to see the inflation data cooperate before fully pricing a September cut," said Knightley. "If core CPI stays sticky above 3%, the Fed may need to hold even with a softening labor market."
The June payrolls report was released a day earlier than usual due to the Independence Day holiday. The next major labor market data point will be the July jobs report, scheduled for release on Aug. 7.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.