Market Update: 4th February 2026- US Jobs: Cooling, Not Cracking and ADP Gets Its Say Today

The US labour market continues to cool, though it remains stubbornly far from cold. Payroll growth has slowed to a pace more consistent with long-run trends, suggesting the economy is easing off the accelerator rather than slamming on the brakes. For now, that distinction matters.

Today’s ADP employment change will add another data point to a debate that has grown increasingly subtle. Once a market mover in its own right, ADP now serves more as a directional sense check, useful, imperfect, and often revised in spirit if not in fact. Expectations are modest, and the market will be more interested in whether hiring restraint is broadening than in the headline number itself.

Balance Is Returning — Slowly

Labour force participation has continued to grind higher, helping to relieve some of the pressure that once defined this cycle. Wage growth is easing at the margins, but without the corresponding spike in unemployment that policymakers would rather avoid. This is the elusive “soft landing” in action less dramatic than advertised, but still functional.

That said, the labour market is no longer firing on all cylinders. Job openings have fallen, the quits rate has normalised, and workers appear less inclined to test their bargaining power. Confidence is no longer booming; it is behaving.

The Divide Beneath the Data

The real story remains under the surface. Healthcare, government, and leisure continue to do the heavy lifting, while manufacturing and other rate-sensitive sectors remain on the back foot. Professional services hiring is cautious, tech remains selective, and expansion plans look more spreadsheet-driven than aspirational.

This is not a labour market driven by exuberance. It is one shaped by demographics, cost control, and a general sense that caution is once again fashionable.
Implications: Less Heat, Fewer Surprises

For policymakers, the labour market is cooperating , just enough. It is cooling without breaking, easing wage pressure without triggering job losses. That keeps rate cuts on the table, but firmly out of reach for now.

For markets, the takeaway is familiar but worth repeating , slower job growth is not a problem if it reflects balance rather than stress. At present, the evidence still favours the former.

Bottom Line

The US job market is losing momentum, but not its footing. Today’s ADP release may nudge expectations at the margin, but it is unlikely to change the broader narrative. The labour market is normalising, quietly, unevenly, and without much drama.

In the current environment, that may be the most bullish outcome of all.

Anyway, till next time, all of you trade safe!

By James Trescothick
Head of Market Research and Market Analysis

Risk Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Financial markets involve risks, and past performance is not indicative of future results. Always conduct your own research and seek professional advice before making investment decisions.