- US private-sector payrolls rose by 98,000 in June per ADP Research data, missing the Bloomberg consensus estimate of 120,000 and down from 122,000 in May — but the three-month run still represents the best stretch of private hiring in more than a year, with gains broad-based across industries, firm sizes, and regions.
- Education and health services accounted for approximately half the June gains, followed by trade, transportation and utilities, and financial activities; almost every sector added headcount, suggesting the slowdown relative to estimates reflects labor supply constraints in certain industries rather than demand weakness.
- Workers who changed jobs saw pay accelerate to 6.6% year-over-year in June (up from the prior month), while job-stayers saw wages grow 4.4% — a bifurcation suggesting the labor market still rewards mobility even as overall hiring moderates.
- The official government jobs report due Thursday is expected to show 115,000 total jobs added (including public sector), which would mark the strongest six-month hiring stretch since mid-2024; a strong print could reinforce Fed hawks’ case for rate hikes — adding further pressure to risk assets including equities and bitcoin that are already under macro stress.
What Happened?
ADP Research released its June private-sector payroll count Wednesday, showing 98,000 jobs added — solid but below the 120,000 Bloomberg consensus estimate and slightly down from the 122,000 added in May. The report, based on payrolls covering more than 26 million US private-sector employees and published in collaboration with the Stanford Digital Economy Lab, showed education and health services driving approximately half the gains. Despite the headline miss, the data capped what ADP described as the best three-month hiring stretch in more than a year, with gains broad across firm size and geography. ADP chief economist Nela Richardson noted the labor market is showing two faces simultaneously: “It’s taking people longer to find work, but there also are signs of labor supply constraints in certain industries” — a tightness that supports wage growth despite moderated headline hiring.
Why It Matters?
The ADP print is the prelude to Thursday’s official Bureau of Labor Statistics payrolls report, which will include public-sector hiring and is expected to show 115,000 total jobs added. A strong Thursday number would validate the ADP trend and reinforce the hawkish Fed narrative that is already weighing on markets: Fed Chair Kevin Warsh has made clear inflation control is the priority, Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack suggested rate hikes may be necessary, and last week’s hot inflation print has removed rate cuts from the near-term table. A labor market that’s adding jobs at a solid clip removes the Fed’s main argument for easing and makes the rate-hike scenario more credible — with direct implications for treasury yields, the dollar, and non-yielding assets like bitcoin, which hit a 21-month low Wednesday partly on Fed fears.
What’s Next?
Thursday’s official payrolls report is the key event. A print near or above 115,000 — especially combined with low unemployment and continued wage growth — would likely drive treasury yields higher and extend the dollar’s recent strength. The geopolitical wildcard is the US-Iran ceasefire and Doha talks: the ADP report noted that falling energy prices and improved consumer confidence from the Hormuz de-escalation could provide a future labor market boost, as the Middle East conflict had driven both inflation and consumer sentiment to multi-year extremes. If the ceasefire holds and energy prices continue to ease, the second half of 2026 could see a divergence between still-tight labor markets and easing inflation — giving the Fed a cleaner path to hold rates rather than hike.
Source: Bloomberg












