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U.S. Private Sector Employment Drops by 45,000 in October — Largest Decline in Over Two Years
Abstract:The latest U.S. employment and business data have once again raised alarms over the countrys economic outlook. According to the newest ADP report, private-sector employment fell by 45,000 jobs in Octo
The latest U.S. employment and business data have once again raised alarms over the countrys economic outlook. According to the newest ADP report, private-sector employment fell by 45,000 jobs in October, marking the steepest monthly decline in more than two and a half years. The figure came in far below market expectations, underscoring a weakening labor-market resilience.
During the four weeks ending October 25, U.S. private companies shed an average of 11,250 payroll positions per week, for a total loss of 45,000 jobs excluding government employees. This was the first notable downturn since March 2023. Analysts point to rising profit pressures, waning corporate expansion, and slipping consumer confidence as key factors prompting companies to slow hiring or even begin layoffs. Meanwhile, the NFIB Small Business Confidence Index dropped to a six-month low in October, signaling growing anxiety among smaller firms about future conditions.
A deeper concern lies in the data blackout caused by the prolonged federal government shutdown. Kevin Hassett, director of the White House National Economic Council, warned that the record-long shutdown may have resulted in portions of October‘s economic data being “lost forever,” making it harder for policymakers and analysts to accurately assess the real state of the U.S. economy. With inflation and labor indicators heavily dependent on official statistics, this information vacuum adds further uncertainty to the Federal Reserve’s policy decisions. In the absence of reliable government data, markets may be forced to rely on private-sector estimates—raising the risk of policy misjudgment.
At the same time, corporate-debt risks are mounting. Barclays recently downgraded Oracle‘s debt rating to “Underweight” and warned the company could run out of cash by November 2026. The bank noted that Oracle’s heavy capital spending on data-center expansion to compete in the AI race has far outpaced its free cash-flow capacity, pushing its debt-to-equity ratio to 500%—the highest among major tech firms. Should this trend continue, Oracles credit rating could be further cut to BBB-, placing it on the brink of junk-bond status. Analysts say this reflects not only the financial strain from AI-related capex but also a potential source of volatility for the broader tech sector.
Overall, the U.S. economy is facing a “triple squeeze”: a cooling labor market, disrupted statistical reporting, and mounting corporate debt. With monetary policy direction still uncertain and the Fed possibly delaying rate cuts, investors should be alert to the risk that the much-hoped-for “soft landing” may shift toward a “hard landing.” In the near term, market sentiment may continue to depend on policy headlines and liquidity expectations, but if employment and corporate fundamentals keep deteriorating, the downside pressure on the U.S. economy will intensify.
Gold Technical Analysis

Gold prices are currently trading within a $4,150 – $4,100 per ounce range.
Trading Strategy: Buy near the lower end and sell near the upper end of the range, with a stop-loss of $10 – $20.
Resistance: $4,150 / oz
Support: $4,100 / oz
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