US Private Sector Adds 324,000 Jobs In July, Surpassing Expectations: Job Market Demonstrates Strong Resilience

Zinger Key Points
  • Private businesses added 324,000 jobs in July, well above the expected 189,000, according to ADP report.
  • Markets were volatile on Wednesday after a downgrading of the United States' credit rating by Fitch caused widespread risk aversion.
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The American labor market is demonstrating remarkable resilience, as evidenced by the latest employment report from Automatic Data Processing Inc. ADP. In July, the pace of new job growth experienced a modest decline, dropping from almost half a million new jobs in June to 324,000, still significantly surpassing economist expectations of 189,000 new employees.

The ADP employment data serves as a preview for the eagerly awaited jobs report on Friday, with economists expecting a drop in non-farm payrolls to 200,000 in July, a stable unemployment rate at 3.6% and a cooling of annual wage growth rate to 4.2%.

July’s ADP Employment Report: What You Need To Know

  • U.S. private businesses added 324,000 new employees in July, less than the downwardly revised 455,000 figure from June, but well above the expected 189,000.
  • Nela Richardson, ADP’s chief economist, said: “The economy is doing better than expected and a healthy labor market continues to support household spending. We continue to see a slowdown in pay growth without broad-based job loss.”
  • The growth in employment primarily stemmed from small and midsized companies, which added 237,000 and 138,000 jobs, respectively. In contrast, large companies reported a decline of 67,000 jobs.
  • Leisure and hospitality were again the biggest drivers of job creation, adding 201,000 new employees. Employment losses were recorded in manufacturing, down 36,000, and financial activities, down 5,000.
  • Pay growth extended its downward trend in July. Job stayers saw an annual increase of 6.2%, the slowest pace of gains since November 2021. For job changers, pay growth slowed to 10.2%.

Market Reactions:

Traders adjusted their expectations for interest rate hikes downward, partly influenced by Fitch’s downgrade of the United States’ long-term foreign currency issuer default rating from AAA to AA+.

The market-implied probability of a rate hike in September narrowed to 15% and the likelihood of a rate hike by November eased to 27%.

Stocks exhibited volatility on Wednesday, with S&P 500 futures trading in negative territory. On the first trading day of the month, Tuesday, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust SPY declined by 0.3%.

Read now: Stock Futures Dive After Fitch US Downgrade: Why This Analyst Forecasts ‘Pretty Painful’ And ‘Tricky’ August

Photo via Shutterstock.

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Posted In: Macro Economic EventsBroad U.S. Equity ETFsTop StoriesEconomicsETFsADP employmentemploymentjob marketJobs Reportlabor marketUnemployment
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