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FILE. A job seeker waits to talk to a recruiter at a job fair in Sunrise, Florida, Aug. 2025
– Copyright AP Photo/Marta Lavandier
New labour market data highlights a growing transatlantic divide, with US payroll additions slowing drastically, while the Eurozone unemployment rate remains anchored at an all-time low.
Fresh employment figures released on Thursday expose a diverging trajectory for the world’s most prominent advanced economies, as severe hiring slowdowns in the US contrast with historic resilience in European labour markets.
According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, nonfarm payrolls increased by a mere 57,000 in June. This figure drastically missed market expectations, which had anticipated an addition of 113,000 jobs, and it marks a steep decline from the 172,000 positions created in the previous month.
Despite the sharp cooling in overall job creation, the US unemployment rate unexpectedly ticked down to 4.2%, representing a slight improvement from the 4.3% recorded in May.
Other metrics present a nuanced picture of the American economy.
Initial jobless claims remained perfectly steady at 215,000 for the week, defying analyst estimates that predicted a slight increase of around 218,000. Meanwhile, continuing claims fell slightly to 1.814 million, dipping below the projected 1.820 million.
Across the Atlantic, the European employment landscape continues to demonstrate remarkable steadfastness.
According to data published by Eurostat, the Eurozone unemployment rate remained stable at 6.2% in May, holding firm at a record low for the currency bloc.
This figure perfectly aligns with market projections and underscores the enduring tightness of the European job market, even as broader economic uncertainties linger across the continent.
Central bank implications
The latest employment reports arrive at a critical juncture for both the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank and their respective monetary policy outlooks.
In the US, the severe drop in nonfarm payroll growth provides compelling evidence that the labour market is finally softening under the weight of restrictive financial conditions.
The Federal Reserve opted to halt its interest rate hikes in June, keeping borrowing costs steady as policymakers evaluate the delayed impact of their previous tightening cycle.
While the drop in the headline unemployment rate to 4.2% paints a slightly mixed picture, the dismal 57,000 payroll figure is likely to reinforce the cautious stance.
Analysts suggest that if payroll numbers continue to print this low, the Federal Reserve might face pressure to discuss rate cuts later in the year to prevent a broader economic contraction in 2026, but for now a single soft print is likely not enough.
“The payrolls miss reads as a growth wobble, and the knee-jerk is to price cuts back in. That’s the trap. Unemployment just fell to 4.2%, so a hawkish Fed has all the cover it needs to look through one soft payroll print, and relief may not come,” said Iggy Ioppe, CIO at Theo.
“A soft print will immediately soften hike pressure, and you’ll see it in the repricing before the headline settles, but weaker data is not automatically bullish. The Warsh Fed has put more weight on inflation credibility and less on forward guidance, so one soft report may not be enough to move a Fed still focused on inflation,” concluded Fabian Dori, CIO at Sygnum Bank.
Conversely, for the European Central Bank there is no substantial doubt about whether there will be a change of course toward favouring rate cuts.
The unwavering 6.2% unemployment rate in the Eurozone highlights persistent domestic demand for workers and maintains inflation as a priority issue.
The ECB proceeded with another interest rate hike in June, citing stubborn price pressures. With employment hovering at historic highs, European policymakers may feel fully justified in maintaining a strict, hawkish posture.
The steadfastness of the European labour force gives the central bank a sturdy economic foundation to absorb tighter financial conditions without triggering an immediate recession.
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