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Thursday Dec 4 2025 00:00
3 min
In a surprising development, a report released by payroll processing firm ADP on Wednesday revealed a decrease of 32,000 jobs in the US private sector during the month of November. This decline reflects a notable slowdown in the labor market, particularly with small businesses suffering significantly.
The data is raising increasing concerns about the economic situation of the United States. This decrease indicates that the problems may be deeper than initially anticipated, sharply contrasting with the revised upward increase in October, which amounted to 47,000 jobs.
Following the release of the report, spot gold experienced a slight increase, settling back above the $4220 level.
While large businesses (those with 50 or more employees) actually saw a net gain of 90,000 employees, businesses with fewer than 50 employees shed 120,000 jobs. Businesses with between 20 and 49 employees were the hardest hit, losing 74,000 jobs. This is the largest decrease since March 2023.
The education and healthcare services industries led new hiring with the addition of 33,000 jobs, while the leisure and hospitality sector added 13,000. However, a widespread decline in various other sectors dragged down the overall figures.
The professional and business services sector suffered the largest losses, declining by 26,000 jobs. Other sectors experiencing layoffs included the information services sector (down 20,000 jobs), the manufacturing sector (down 18,000 jobs), as well as financial activities and the construction sector, both of which saw a decrease of 9,000 jobs.
Wage growth also experienced a slowdown, with pay for job-stayers increasing by 4.4% year-over-year, a decrease of 0.1 percentage point from October.
ADP Chief Economist Nela Richardson commented, "As employers deal with cautious consumers and a still-uncertain macroeconomy, recent hiring has been uneven. While the November slowdown was broad-based, it was mainly driven by the contraction of small businesses."
This ADP report represents the last set of employment data that the Federal Reserve will see before its meeting scheduled for December 9-10. Futures traders believe the probability of the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates by another 25 basis points is approaching 90%, although some officials have reservations about whether policy should be eased further.
In recent weeks, Federal Reserve policymakers have expressed differing opinions. One side believes that interest rate cuts are needed to prevent further deterioration of the labor market, while another side fears that additional interest rate cuts could exacerbate inflation, which remains well above the Federal Reserve's 2% target.
Due to the previous government shutdown, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics has postponed the release date of the non-farm employment data to December 16.
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