
US private payrolls beat estimates as hiring rises to 109,000 in April
Private sector hiring in the United States came in stronger than expected in April, offering fresh evidence of labor market resilience and reinforcing the case for the Federal Reserve to hold interest rates steady.
Data from ADP showed that companies added 109,000 jobs during the month, up from a revised 61,000 in March and ahead of the Dow Jones estimate of 84,000.
The March figure was revised lower by 1,000 jobs.
Wage growth for workers who remained in their roles rose 4.4% annually, marking a slight moderation from the previous month.
Health, education lead gains, again
Despite the stronger headline figure, hiring remained concentrated in a handful of sectors, suggesting that job growth is not broadly distributed across the economy.
Education and health services led the gains once again, adding 61,000 jobs.
Trade, transportation and utilities contributed 25,000 positions, while construction added 10,000.
Financial activities saw a gain of 9,000 jobs.
Other sectors showed more modest growth.
Leisure and hospitality and information services each added 4,000 positions, while manufacturing-linked gains tied to tariff-driven reshoring efforts remained limited, with just 2,000 new jobs.
Professional and business services, however, reported a decline of 8,000 positions.
Small and large firms lead hiring
Job creation trends varied significantly by company size.
Firms with fewer than 50 employees accounted for 65,000 of the new jobs, while large companies with more than 500 workers added 42,000.
“Small and large employers are hiring, but we’re seeing softness in the middle,” said Dr. Nela Richardson,
ADP’s chief economist. “Large companies have resources to deploy, and small ones are the most nimble, both important advantages in a complex labor environment.”
Economists say the data reflects a “low-hire, low-fire” dynamic, where companies are holding on to workers but remain cautious about expanding headcount.
Fed likely to stay on hold
The steady pace of hiring, combined with persistently high inflation driven in part by tariffs and geopolitical tensions, has kept the Federal Reserve in a holding pattern on interest rates.
The rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee recently voted to keep rates unchanged, though the decision included an unusually high number of dissents, with some policymakers questioning guidance that suggested the next move could be a rate cut.
Stronger labor data reduces the urgency for easing monetary policy, as policymakers continue to balance inflation risks against economic growth.
Focus shifts to official jobs report
Markets are now looking ahead to the upcoming nonfarm payrolls report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which provides a broader snapshot of the labor market, including government employment.
Economists expect job growth of around 55,000 for April, with the unemployment rate projected to remain steady at 4.3%.
While ADP’s data tends to skew toward smaller and medium-sized businesses, it often serves as an early indicator of broader employment trends, setting the tone for expectations ahead of the official government release.
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