U.S. job openings declined in July, signaling a weakening labor market
The number of job openings in the United States in July fell more than expected, and hiring activity was also relatively moderate, in line with the trend of a slowing labor market environment.
The Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) report released by the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics on Wednesday showed that as of the last day of July, the number of job openings, a key indicator of labor demand, decreased by 176,000 to 7.181 million. Economists surveyed by Reuters had previously predicted that the number of unfilled positions in July would be 7.378 million.
The number of hires in July increased by 41,000 to 5.308 million; the number of layoffs increased by 12,000 to 1.808 million. The current labor market has already shown signs of slowing down. Economists believe this phenomenon is related to the broad tariff policies implemented by President Donald Trump. At the same time, the Trump administration's tightening of immigration policies has also led to a reduction in labor supply.
A Reuters survey of economists showed that the market expects the highly anticipated employment report to be released by the U.S. government on Friday will show that non-farm payrolls increased by 75,000 in August (compared to an increase of 73,000 in July). In August, the U.S. government announced that over the past three months, non-farm payrolls increased by an average of 35,000 per month, while the average monthly increase for the same period in 2024 was 123,000.
The market also predicts that the unemployment rate in August will rise to 4.3% from 4.2% in July.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell hinted last month that an interest rate cut might be implemented at the Federal Reserve policy meeting to be held from September 16 to 17. He acknowledged that risks facing the labor market are rising, but also pointed out that inflation remains a major threat.
Since December last year, the Federal Reserve has kept its benchmark overnight interest rate in the range of 4.25% to 4.50%.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Phishing Risks in DeFi: What Investors Must Do to Protect Their Assets
- DeFi phishing attacks now account for 56.5% of breaches in 2025, surpassing technical exploits as the sector's top security threat. - 2025 phishing losses exceeded $410M, with AI-generated scams achieving 54% click-through rates and triggering market instability like the Venus Protocol $13.5M incident. - Investors must adopt institutional custody solutions, prioritize user education, and demand governance upgrades to combat phishing risks undermining DeFi's trustless model. - Cybercriminals increasingly

Is Bitcoin’s ETF-Driven Growth Sustainable Amid Shifting Institutional Demand?
- -2025 institutional crypto demand shows Bitcoin ETFs rebounding with $33.6B holdings, while Ethereum ETFs face volatile inflows/outflows. - -Bitcoin's zero-yield model contrasts with Ethereum's 6% staking returns under the CLARITY Act, driving dual-asset allocation strategies. - -Ethereum's deflationary tokenomics and regulatory clarity attract 59% of institutions planning >5% crypto allocations in 2025. - -Solana/XRP ETFs gain traction with $311M combined inflows, reflecting diversification into high-gr

MoonBull ($MOBU): The Whitelist-Driven Meme Coin 2.0 with 1000x Potential
- MoonBull ($MOBU) redefines meme coins with structured incentives, Ethereum-based scalability, and institutional-grade security, positioning as a 1000x opportunity in 2025. - Its tokenomics allocate 30% to liquidity pools, 20% for 66-80% APY staking rewards, and 2% auto-burn per transaction, creating a self-sustaining flywheel effect. - Leveraging Ethereum Layer 2 infrastructure (Arbitrum/Base), MoonBull achieves 10,000 TPS and 53% lower gas fees, enabling seamless DeFi integration and institutional credi

Ethereum's Institutional Adoption: A Strategic Asset in Web3 Expansion
- Ethereum's 4.5–5.2% staking yields and 2025 SEC reclassification as a utility token drove $9.4B ETF inflows and 29.6% supply staked by institutions. - 53.14% of $26.63B RWA tokenization market relies on Ethereum, with BlackRock and Goldman Sachs tokenizing $10.8B U.S. Treasuries and $8.32B gold. - DeFi TVL surged to $223B in 2025 via L2 scalability, enabling institutional yield generation through tokenized RWAs and programmable finance. - Regulatory clarity under GENIUS Act and Ethereum's deflationary su

Trending news
MoreCrypto prices
More








