Wall Street is watching the labor market for signs of slower hiring, which could influence the Federal Reserve's next rate ...
With this data, ‘no landing’ as well as ‘hard landing’ is a risk the @federalreserve has to reckon with,” he continued.
The U.S. created more jobs than expected in September, in the first employment report since the Federal Reserve carried out ...
U.S. job growth accelerated in September and the unemployment slipped to 4.1%, further reducing the need for the Federal ...
The September jobs report was stronger than expected and is likely to assuage recession fears, driving up hopes for soft ...
Economists had projected the US added 140,000 jobs in September and the unemployment rate held steady at 4.2%.
The Labor Department said on Friday that the economy created 254,000 jobs in September, smashing Wall Street expectations and ...
Friday’s jobs data should alleviate concerns that the U.S. labor market is rapidly heading into a recession, signaling that the Federal Reserve won’t need to implement more dramatic rate cuts to prop ...
In U.S. Federal Reserve officials' latest projections and recent public commentary, the overall economy is seen remaining in ...
Fed Chair Jerome Powell this week acknowledged that "tension" and said employment data in the months ahead, rather than other ...
The Federal Reserve’s traditional roles in controlling inflation and supporting full employment thus remain critical. Meanwhile, there’s growing speculation about how central banks ...