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April US payrolls growth slows before full tariff impact felt

In This Article:

(Reuters) -U.S. job growth slowed marginally in April, but the outlook for the labor market is increasingly darkening as President Donald Trump's aggressive tariff policy heightens economic uncertainty.

Nonfarm payrolls increased by 177,000 jobs last month after rising by a downwardly revised 185,000 in March, the Labor Department said on Friday.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast 130,000 jobs added last month after a previously reported 228,000 advance in March.

The unemployment rate held steady at 4.2%. It is too early for the labor market to show the impact of Trump's on-and-off again tariffs policy. Amid the uncertainty, the Federal Reserve is expected to keep benchmark interest rates in the 4.25%-4.50% range next week. Economists expect companies will reduce hours before resorting to mass layoffs.

MARKET REACTION:

STOCKS: S&P 500 E-minis added to gains and were up 0.85%, pointing to a solid open on Wall Street

BONDS: The yield on benchmark U.S. 10-year notesrose to 3.2676%, the two-year note yield rose to 3.744%FOREX: The dollar index pared a loss and was 0.30% lower, while the euro extended 0.27% higher

COMMENTS:

MARK MALEK, CHIEF INVESTMENT OFFICER, SIEBERT NXT, NEW YORK

“We are expecting a slow decline in a non-farm payroll growth and while it's not positive by any means it's better than could've been expected. I think there were whisper numbers around there that were significantly less and I think people were somewhat braced for a bigger potential drop. The unemployment rate remains the same that was pretty positive.”

ROBERT PAVLIK, SENIOR PORTFOLIO MANAGER, DAKOTA WEALTH, FAIRFIELD, CONNECTICUT

"The economy isn't collapsing as people were worried about. We came in better than expected, both on the nonfarm payrolls report itself, but then it didn't show any real increase to average hourly earnings and so that came in a little bit lighter than expected. So that takes the concerns of wage pressures a little bit out of the picture."

"The market likes the news. There'll be some out there that will point to a lagging indicator the fact that the Liberation Day sort of came and didn't necessarily get completely factored into non farm payrolls. But I really wouldn't worry too much about that yet. I would focus more on the positive aspect of this report -- the positivity that the US economy is continuing to move forward and still healthy enough, not gangbusters, but still healthy enough."

MARK MALEK, CHIEF INVESTMENT OFFICER, SIEBERT NXT, NEW YORK

“The numbers are holding up: so obviously the survey was worth for 138,000 and we came in slightly higher but last month was revised significantly downward. I think it just reflects what the consensus is expecting. We are expecting a slow decline in a non-farm payroll growth and while it's not positive by any means it's better than could've been expected. I think there were whisper numbers around there that were significantly less and I think people were somewhat braced for a bigger potential drop. The unemployment rate remains the same that was pretty positive.”