• Home
  • Pro
  • Partners
  • Help and support
  • English
  • 简体中文
  • 繁体中文
  • ไทย
  • Tiếng Việt
  • Español
  • Português
  • لغة عربية
Pepperstone logo
Pepperstone logo
  • Ways to trade
    • CFD trading

      Trade price movements with competitive spreads

    • Premium clients

      Exclusive rewards and bespoke benefits for high-vol traders

    • Pricing

      Discover our tight spreads, plus all other possble fees

    • Professional

      Access exclusive features like higher leverage, cash rebates and premium rewards.

    • Trading accounts
    • Active trader program
    • Demo trading
    • Refer a friend
    • Trading hours
    • 24-hour trading
    • Maintenance
    • Risk management
  • Markets
    • Forex CFDs

      Get great rates on majors like EUR/USD, plus minors and exotics

    • Commodity CFDs

      Trade on metals, energies and softs, with spreads from 2 cents on oil

    • Cryptocurrency CFDs

      Speculate on Bitcoin, Ether and more, with a trusted broker

    • Shares CFDs
    • ETF CFDs
    • Index CFDs
    • Currency Index CFD
    • Dividends for index CFDs
    • Dividends for share CFDs
    • CFD forwards
  • Trading platforms
    • TradingView

      Trade through the world-famous supercharts with great pricing

    • MetaTrader 5

      Explore the apex in trading automation with our execution tech

    • The Pepperstone platform
    • MetaTrader 4
    • CopyTrading
    • cTrader
    • Trading tools
  • Market analysis
    • Navigating markets

      Latest news and analysis from our experts

    • Meet the analysts

      Our global team giving your trading the edge

  • Learn
    • Trading guides

      Trading guides & educational materials

    • Webinars

      Grow your knowledge

  • About us
    • Who we are

      Pepperstone was born from the dream of making trading better

    • Pepperstone reviews
    • Press releases
    • Company awards
    • Protecting clients online
    • CFD trading

      Trade price movements with competitive spreads

    • Premium clients

      Exclusive rewards and bespoke benefits for high-vol traders

    • Pricing

      Discover our tight spreads, plus all other possble fees

    • Professional

      Access exclusive features like higher leverage, cash rebates and premium rewards.

    • Trading accounts
    • Active trader program
    • Demo trading
    • Refer a friend
    • Trading hours
    • 24-hour trading
    • Maintenance
    • Risk management
    • Forex CFDs

      Get great rates on majors like EUR/USD, plus minors and exotics

    • Commodity CFDs

      Trade on metals, energies and softs, with spreads from 2 cents on oil

    • Cryptocurrency CFDs

      Speculate on Bitcoin, Ether and more, with a trusted broker

    • Shares CFDs
    • ETF CFDs
    • Index CFDs
    • Currency Index CFD
    • Dividends for index CFDs
    • Dividends for share CFDs
    • CFD forwards
    • TradingView

      Trade through the world-famous supercharts with great pricing

    • MetaTrader 5

      Explore the apex in trading automation with our execution tech

    • The Pepperstone platform
    • MetaTrader 4
    • CopyTrading
    • cTrader
    • Trading tools
    • Navigating markets

      Latest news and analysis from our experts

    • Meet the analysts

      Our global team giving your trading the edge

    • Trading guides

      Trading guides & educational materials

    • Webinars

      Grow your knowledge

    • Who we are

      Pepperstone was born from the dream of making trading better

    • Pepperstone reviews
    • Press releases
    • Company awards
    • Protecting clients online
FOMC

The FOMC Seem Too Sanguine About The Ailing US Labour Market

Michael Brown
Michael Brown
Senior Research Strategist
Feb 2, 2026
Share
While the FOMC seem relatively relaxed about the US employment backdrop, a look beneath the surface of incoming data suggests things are considerably softer than policymakers believe, suggesting dovish risks to the policy path.

Summary

  • FOMC On Hold: The FOMC seem to have sought solace in a stabilising unemployment rate, hence having shifted towards a 'wait and see' policy stance
  • Fragile Under The Surface: However, under the surface, downside labour market risks appear mor significant, and point to a greater margin of slack being present
  • Dovish Risks: In turn, this presents potential dovish risks to the policy outlook, particularly if this fragility results in a non-linear rise in unemployment

The FOMC sprung no surprises at last week’s policy meeting, standing pat on rates as expected, with policymakers having seemingly been reassured by recent labour market data that a ‘wait and see’ approach is now appropriate.

I’m starting to wonder, though, whether the Committee might well be a little over-confident in the state of the employment backdrop.

Unemployment Stabilising For The ‘Wrong’ Reasons

The little-changed policy statement noted that the unemployment rate has ‘shown some signs of stabilization’, while Chair Powell struck a similar tone at the post-meeting presser, noting that the labour market may be ‘stabilising’ after a period of what he described as ‘gradual softening’. At a headline level, at least, these statements are indeed correct, with both unemployment (U-3) and underemployment (U-6) having declined notably in December.

Preview

That decline, though, was not driven by people finding work, but was instead driven largely by people leaving the labour force altogether. Participation fell to 62.4% last month, in a sign that workers are likely becoming discouraged from finding employment as a result of the ‘no hire, no fire’ labour market dynamic which currently dominates, and hence are abandoning their search for work.

Preview

Noncyclical Private Hiring Is Non-Existent

That dynamic is well-evidenced by the establishment survey. Private payrolls excluding healthcare remains my preferred metric on this front – I exclude the healthcare sector as it is noncyclical, domestically-focused, and very much non-rate sensitive. Doing so paints a starkly different picture of the employment backdrop. The 3- and 6-month averages of this metric of job creation both sit comfortably in negative territory, while private employment ex-healthcare has actually fallen in every month bar one since last May.

Put another way, without the addition of healthcare jobs, the private sector would’ve added just 20k new roles over the entirety of 2025!

Preview

Layoffs Are Starting To Accelerate

To my mind, that’s speaks volumes about the lacklustre pace of hiring in the economy at large. Added to which, signs are now emerging that the ‘no hire, no fire’ backdrop could well be shifting, with the balance increasingly tilting towards layoffs.

A cursory glance over recent corporate reports indicates job losses likely to pick-up across sectors, with some of the most notable recent announcements including UPS’ plans to shed 30,000 staff, Amazon laying off as many as 16,000 employees, Dow planning to trim headcount by over 4,000, with smaller layoffs also having been announced by numerous financial services and technology firms. The risk, here, is that the pace of these layoffs ramps up further, resulting in a rapid and non-linear increase in unemployment.

Preview

Jobless Claims Sending A False Signal

Some would point to the relatively subdued level of both initial and continuing jobless claims as evidence that the labour market is not in as fragile a way as I’m implying here. However, again, the message here is likely not as rosy as the relatively benign headline metrics – with initial claims having averaged 206k over the last four weeks, and continuing claims at around 1.850mln – might imply.

Typically, US unemployment benefits are paid for a maximum of around six months, with some variation from state-to-state. Hence, the somewhat benign level of jobless claims likely owes not to claimants finding work, but instead because they are no longer eligible to claim unemployment insurance, having been out of work for longer than the maximum duration for which said payments can be made.

Once again, the BLS employment report supports this thesis. We’ve already shown that private sector hiring is at best anaemic, and at worse non-existent. The data also shows that 26% of those classified as unemployed have now been so classified for more than 27 weeks (i.e. > 6 months), with that not only being the highest such level since early-2022, but also having risen dramatically from around 20.4% just eight months ago.

Preview

Consumer Confidence Reflects Reality ‘On The Ground’

In turn, this helps to explain the dire consumer confidence metrics that we received this week. Not only did the Conference Board’s headline index fall to its lowest level since 2014, but the ‘jobs hard to get metric’ rose to its highest level since the pandemic, largely reflecting the underlying labour market weakness outlined here, and going some way to dispel the false confidence that headline labour metrics may provide.

Preview

Now, as I’ve written before, in a ‘K-shaped’ economy such as the US at present, such a nosedive in consumer confidence need not trigger a sharp slowdown in consumer spending. The marginal propensity to spend continues to hinge much more on the ‘wealth effect’, with higher income deciles continuing to make up the vast majority of overall consumption.

That said, if the bottom of that ‘K’ is to catch-up with the economy at large, it is irrefutable that labour conditions will have to improve in order to enable that to happen. Right now, however, those very labour conditions are moving in the polar opposite direction.

FOMC At Risk Of Falling Behind The Curve

Pulling things together, we have a situation where headline employment metrics are likely providing a degree of false reassurance to policymakers as to the state of the labour market. Under the surface, things appear considerably more fragile, with there remaining a significant risk that the situation tips from one of ‘slow hiring, and slow firing’, to one where the pace of layoffs dramatically picks-up, and conditions sour more broadly.

The FOMC appear somewhat too sanguine about these risks, at least given Wednesday’s statement and presser, presenting a notable risk that policymakers may fall behind the curve. Against such a backdrop, the USD OIS curve discounting just 8bp of easing by April, and only two 25bp cuts this year (both in H2), feels too hawkishly priced.

The material provided here has not been prepared in accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research and as such is considered to be a marketing communication. Whilst it is not subject to any prohibition on dealing ahead of the dissemination of investment research we will not seek to take any advantage before providing it to our clients.

Pepperstone doesn’t represent that the material provided here is accurate, current or complete, and therefore shouldn’t be relied upon as such. The information, whether from a third party or not, isn’t to be considered as a recommendation; or an offer to buy or sell; or the solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any security, financial product or instrument; or to participate in any particular trading strategy. It does not take into account readers’ financial situation or investment objectives. We advise any readers of this content to seek their own advice. Without the approval of Pepperstone, reproduction or redistribution of this information isn’t permitted.

Other sites

  • The Trade Off
  • Partners
  • Group
  • Careers

Ways to trade

  • Pricing
  • Trading accounts
  • Pro
  • Active trader program
  • Refer a friend
  • Trading hours

Platforms

  • Trading platforms
  • TradingView
  • MT5
  • MT4
  • cTrader
  • Copy trading
  • Trading tools

Markets & Symbols

  • Forex
  • Shares
  • ETFs
  • Indices
  • Commodities
  • Currency indices
  • Cryptocurrencies
  • CFD forwards

Insights

  • Navigating markets
  • Meet the analysts
  • Trading guides
  • Videos
  • Webinars

About

  • Press releases
Pepperstone logo
support@pepperstone.com
1786 628 1209
#1 Pineapple House,
Old Fort Bay, Nassau,
New Providence, The Bahamas
  • Legal documents
  • Privacy policy
  • Website terms and conditions
  • Cookie policy
  • Sitemap

© 2025 Pepperstone Markets Limited | Company registration number 177174 B | SIA-F217

Risk Warning: CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage.

80.1% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider.

You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work, and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

You don't own or have rights in the underlying assets. Past performance is no indication of future performance and tax laws are subject to change. The information on this website is general in nature and doesn't take into account your or your client's personal objectives, financial circumstances, or needs. Please read our RDN and other legal documents and ensure you fully understand the risks before you make any trading decisions. We encourage you to seek independent advice.

Pepperstone Markets Limited is located at #1 Pineapple House, Old Fort Bay, Nassau, New Providence, The Bahamas and is licensed and regulated by The Securities Commission of The Bahamas,( SIA-F217).

The information on this site and the products and services offered are not intended for distribution to any person in any country or jurisdiction where such distribution or use would be contrary to local law or regulation.