AG Bondi: Some 'Sick' Stuff on Jeffrey Epstein Is Dropping Tomorrow
Supreme Court Blocks Order From Lunatic Judge That Would've Forced Trump to Unfreeze...
College Speaker: The Holocaust Was Not Unique
'They Crossed the Line': Tom Homan Issues Threat to Activists Who Doxed ICE...
Brian Stelter's Outrage at White House Press Exclusions Meets His Past Support for...
Rachel Maddow's Very, Very, Very Special Friend
Firearms Policy Coalition Takes to Court to Argue Only Congress Can Create Laws
President Trump Signs New Executive Order on DOGE
Democratic Senator Claims Dan Bongino Has 'Zero Experience' to Be FBI Deputy Director
Two Airplanes at Reagan National Airport Narrowly Avoided a Collision
Legacy Media Outlets Really Ought to Calm Down Over White House's Decision on...
Trump, Vance Put the Mainstream Media in Their Place When Taking Questions at...
Shiri Bibas' Family Is Suing Al-Jazeera
Trump Encouraged by GOP Lawmakers to Recognize West Bank As Israeli Territory
Pam Bondi Dismisses Biden-Era DEI Lawsuits Involving Merit-Based Hiring of Firefighters, C...
Tipsheet

November Jobs Report Sends Stock Futures Tumbling

AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File

In another jobs report that's already unsettling stock futures, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on Friday that 263,000 payrolls were added in November while the U.S. unemployment rate remained unchanged at 3.7 percent, but still up from earlier this fall when September's read saw 3.5 percent unemployment. 

Advertisement

While the unemployment rate was expected to remain unchanged, the number of jobs reported in November beat the estimates of 200,000 new jobs by a healthy margin, a signal that the Federal Reserve is sure to take as grounds for continued aggressive interest rate hikes in their bid to bring inflation back down to Fed Chair Jerome Powell's goal of just two percent. 

In the minutes after the November report was released, Dow futures tumbled more than 400 points for a greater than one percent dip before market opening, while S&P 500 futures fell 1.5 percent and Nasdaq-100 futures dropped 2.3 percent. 

Even as the topline number beat expectations, other data in the report show that the economy is still struggling overall. There are still 6 million unemployed, and another 127,000 Americans became "permanent job losers" in November to bring that number to 1.4 million.

Meanwhile, the labor force participation rate for November was 62.1 percent, still 1.3 percent lower than in February 2020 before COVID-19 hit, proving yet again that President Biden and his administration have not, despite their claims, "built" American "back" or "better."

Advertisement

What's more, there are still 5.6 million Americans who are not in the labor force but want a job — 600,000 more than there were before the pandemic. 

When it comes to wages and hours worked, November saw a month-over-month increase of 18 cents in average hourly earnings for an annual growth of 5.1 percent, but that wage increase still lags behind inflation by more than 2.5 percent as Americans continue to take a significant hit to their real wages. At the same time, November saw the average number of hours worked per week decline to 34.4 hours. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement