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#FebNonfarmPayrollsUnexpectedlyFall
The February 2026 Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report, released on Friday, March 6, has indeed sent a shockwave through the markets. After a brief glimmer of hope in January, the U.S. labor market took an unexpected turn into negative territory.
Here is the breakdown of the "dismal" February data:
The Headline Numbers
Nonfarm Payrolls: The U.S. economy lost 92,000 jobs in February. This was a massive miss compared to economist forecasts, which had predicted a modest gain of roughly 60,000 jobs.
The jobless rate edged up to 4.4% (from 4.3% in January).
Adding to the gloom, December 2025 and January 2026 figures were revised downward by a combined 69,000 jobs. Most notably, December was revised from a gain of 48k to a loss of 17k.
Key Sector Drivers
The losses were surprisingly broad-based, affecting sectors that were previously seen as resilient:
Healthcare-28,000A major reversal; largely attributed to strike activity (including nursing unions).
Information-11,000 Continues a long-term downward trend in tech and media.
Federal Gov-10,000 Down 11% since October 2024 as part of ongoing workforce reductions.
Leisure/Hosp. -27,000 Hit by a combination of cooling demand and a severe February cold snap.
Why it Matters
Stagnation: Economists are noting that the U.S. has essentially added zero net jobs since April 2025.
The "Strike" Factor: While the 28k loss in healthcare is partially "artificial" due to strikes, the weakness in construction (-11k) and manufacturing (-12k) suggests a deeper cyclical slowdown.
Fed Implications: This report significantly increases the pressure on the Federal Reserve to consider interest rate cuts to prevent a harder economic landing, despite wage growth remaining somewhat sticky at 3.8% year-over-year.