US Hiring Seen Staying Solid With Focus on Revisions

(Bloomberg) -- The US labor market probably kicked off 2025 with another month of solid growth, while highly anticipated annual revisions are likely to showcase a noticeably more moderate pace of hiring over the past few years.

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Payrolls increased by 170,000 in January after larger advances over the prior two months, when the labor market was recovering from the impacts of hurricanes and a major strike, according to the median projection of economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

The monthly jobs report on Friday will also include annual revisions from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The agency will align the level of payrolls from March of last year to a more comprehensive job count from a quarterly survey derived from unemployment insurance programs.

In August, a preliminary estimate from the BLS indicated its payrolls count in the year through March was overstated by more than 800,000. Revisions to the quarterly survey since then, however, show a smaller adjustment is likely.

The benchmark revisions will also include adjustments for business births and deaths which play a role in BLS payrolls revisions since March.

What Bloomberg Economics Says...

“As part of the BLS’s annual benchmarking exercise, the employment level for March 2024 will likely be revised down by about 700k — less than the preliminary benchmark estimate of -818k. Updated forecasts for the ‘birth-and-death’ model should lower December’s employment level by another 234k. Altogether, last year’s average monthly job growth should fall from 182k to an estimated 148k after the revisions.”

—Anna Wong, Stuart Paul, Eliza Winger, Estelle Ou & Chris G. Collins, economists. To read the full note, click here

For Federal Reserve officials, the expected outcome of the January jobs report and the benchmark revisions will likely be consistent with their view that labor demand is moderating, though still strong enough to underpin the economy.

Policymakers, nodding to resilient employment growth, kept interest rates unchanged on Wednesday as they await further progress on inflation before reducing borrowing costs further. A number of Fed officials, including governors Philip Jefferson, Michelle Bowman and Adriana Kugler, speak in the coming days.

Among other data, a BLS report on Tuesday is expected to show about 8 million job openings in December, little changed from a month earlier. The Institute for Supply Management will release January manufacturing and services surveys on Monday and Wednesday, respectively.