U.S. December non-farm payrolls increased by 50,000, a month-on-month decline. The expectation was 60,000, but the actual figure fell short. However, the unemployment rate unexpectedly dropped to 4.4%, below the expected 4.5%. This set of data is a bit subtle—job growth is weak, but the unemployment rate has improved, adding some uncertainty to the economic outlook. How the market interprets this contradictory signal remains to be seen.
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NeonCollector
· 01-12 06:31
This data is a bit strange. Employment is not strong, yet the unemployment rate is falling. It feels a bit inconsistent.
Faking the unemployment rate? Or has someone really exited the labor force? These details need to be dug into.
Job growth of only 50,000 is honestly a bit disappointing compared to historical records. The Fed must be getting nervous.
Regarding the conflicting signals, let's wait and see what the Fed says. Anyway, I can't see through this game.
Expectations can't keep up with reality. US stocks might decline in this wave, so maybe wait a bit before taking action.
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ruggedSoBadLMAO
· 01-11 07:22
Employment data is underperforming again; there's a reason behind how the market is reacting this time.
Does the decrease in the unemployment rate mean that some people have simply given up?
50,000 vs 60,000, does this small difference really change anything?
The data is contradictory, a textbook case; let's wait and see how it reverses later.
It's another Schrödinger's economic data—FUD or good news all depends on the mood of the interpretation.
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TaxEvader
· 01-10 12:34
What does the improvement in the unemployment rate indicate? Is a wave of layoffs coming amid weak employment?
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UnluckyValidator
· 01-10 04:13
Employment data is once again disappointing, but the unemployment rate looks good. What's the logic behind this?
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Wait, 50,000 new jobs? Are you joking? The expectations are so far off.
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Unemployment rate decreases while employment numbers are poor. Can someone tell me what's really going on?
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Again with this contradictory data. I really can't understand what the Fed is trying to do.
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Contradictory signals keep appearing. It's really hard to say what the next step will be.
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Jobs are weak, but the unemployment rate is low? This bet doesn't seem quite right.
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The US economy's performance is becoming more and more absurd.
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ShamedApeSeller
· 01-09 14:05
Once again, we have this conflicting data situation—poor employment expectations, yet the unemployment rate is actually better? I really can't understand this logic.
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SeeYouInFourYears
· 01-09 14:03
With employment data so weak, why is the unemployment rate actually falling? This logic doesn't quite hold up.
The Federal Reserve is scratching its head again, wondering if these numbers can hold up until the rate cut.
An improving unemployment rate sounds good, but I'm worried there's too much statistical manipulation.
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MetaverseHermit
· 01-09 14:01
This data is a bit surreal—employment numbers are weak, but the unemployment rate has decreased. What's going on?
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PoolJumper
· 01-09 13:51
The Federal Reserve is once again troubled; employment data is weak, and the unemployment rate is still pretending to be good.
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Wait, how can the unemployment rate decrease? This logic doesn't add up.
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50,000 jobs? I'm thinking whether they should raise or cut interest rates.
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The market is really confused now; the data is contradicting itself.
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It's that same "good news, bad news" routine again, looks really annoying.
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Unemployment rate improves but employment remains weak, a dull signal.
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If this data truly reflects reality, then it's a joke; it feels like another smoke screen.
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GateUser-ed17b504
· 01-09 13:42
The portrait seen from the outside, for now, knows that you lie, and I will explain, the figure that was placed in your executive to represent you is a disaster, and a HABITUAL LIAR.
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GweiWatcher
· 01-09 13:41
Employment data is weak again, but the unemployment rate is even lower? This operation is a bit strange.
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Same old rhetoric, a low unemployment rate means good? I don't think so...
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50,000 vs 60,000, just a difference of 10,000. The data is so conflicting, I really can't hold it together.
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Contradictory signals are flying everywhere. The market will depend on how the Fed responds.
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The decline in the unemployment rate is not simple; maybe people have directly dropped out...
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Wait, is this data actually good news or bad news? The market will react for a while.
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It's another combination of weak employment + low unemployment rate. How will the Fed decide?
U.S. December non-farm payrolls increased by 50,000, a month-on-month decline. The expectation was 60,000, but the actual figure fell short. However, the unemployment rate unexpectedly dropped to 4.4%, below the expected 4.5%. This set of data is a bit subtle—job growth is weak, but the unemployment rate has improved, adding some uncertainty to the economic outlook. How the market interprets this contradictory signal remains to be seen.