key definitions
- nonfarm payrolls
- monthly change in jobs outside farms — the headline labor market number markets trade instantly.
- unemployment rate
- household survey measure of job seekers as a share of the labor force — can diverge from payrolls when participation moves.
- jolts
- job openings and turnover survey — openings are a leading read on labor demand.
- initial claims
- weekly filings for unemployment insurance — a high-frequency coincident indicator of layoffs.
no single labor series tells the whole story. payrolls are noisy. the unemployment rate lags turns. claims spike in sudden shocks. jolts openings peaked long after policy started tightening in the 2022 cycle — another reminder that openings are not a real-time fed thermostat.
equity investors often anchor on whether labor is 'too hot' for the fed. the more precise question is whether wage growth is compatible with the inflation target without crushing margins. that is a productivity and pricing power question, not just a headcount question.
early-1990s recession and repair
job losses peaked after the recession ended — a classic lag that confused early recovery trades.
- economydefense cuts and credit restraint compounded the cycle.
- fedeasing into a shallow recovery.
- marketcyclicals waited for confirmation that hiring stabilized.
unemployment can keep rising while markets bottom — equities bottom on rate-of-change, not levels.
the unemployment rate rose from roughly 5.6% in 1990 toward the mid-7% range by 1992.
BLS; FRED UNRATE
late-1990s tight labor
4% unemployment felt like full employment; wages stirred but productivity camouflaged inflation.
- economycapital spending boom and tight hiring.
- fedhiked into euphoria.
- marketspeculative growth until the collapse.
ultra-low unemployment plus asset bubbles is a policy accident waiting to happen.
unemployment fell below 4.5% for several years heading into 2000.
BLS UNRATE
post-dot-com repair to pre-crisis tightness
job growth returned; unemployment drifted down into housing peak employment.
- economyhousing and consumer credit filled the jobs hole left by tech capex.
- fedhiked into mid-2000s inflation worries.
- marketfinancials and builders led until credit snapped.
re-employment without productivity often hides fragility in household balance sheets.
unemployment fell from above 5.5% in 2003 toward the mid-4% range by 2006–2007.
BLS UNRATE
great recession labor collapse
payroll losses were enormous; unemployment spiked into double digits on monthly reads.
- economytrade and finance shocks destroyed demand.
- fedemergency easing and credit backstops.
- marketcyclicals and small caps were annihilated.
when layoffs are nonlinear, earnings estimates miss in clusters — not smoothly.
annual average unemployment jumped from below 5% in 2007 to above 9% in 2009–2010.
BLS UNRATE
long expansion 2011 to 2019
slow-but-steady hiring took unemployment to multi-decade lows.
- economyservices-led growth; manufacturing weakness later.
- fedtapering then gradual hikes.
- marketmega-cap growth dominated.
late-cycle tightness without wage breakout bought time for equities — until tariffs and policy error risk returned.
unemployment fell from roughly 9% in 2010 toward 3.7% by 2019.
BLS UNRATE
pandemic whiplash
violent collapse, reopening surge, then normalization with still-tight services hiring.
- economyfiscal transfers and sector rotation.
- fedzero then hikes then cuts.
- marketlabor data moved tech multiples more than NFP alone.
post-pandemic, treat openings and quits as part of the signal — not just payrolls.
unemployment spiked in 2020 before falling back toward the low single digits by 2022–2024.
BLS UNRATE; BLS JOLTS
when this page is updated, check participation and prime-age employment — not just the unemployment rate. demographic shifts can make the headline look peaceful while tightness remains real.
labor resilience in 2022–2024 stretched recession calls. history says patience with the data matters more than certainty on timing.