US adds 172,000 jobs in May, nearly double the ~85K consensus; unemployment holds 4.3%, killing near-term Fed cut hopes
U.S.
At a glance
- Nonfarm payrolls +172,000 in May 2026 vs Dow Jones consensus ~80,000–85,000; unemployment 4.3% (BLS, June 5)
- Private payrolls +120,000; government +52,000; healthcare +35,200, manufacturing +7,000, social assistance +12,000; financial activities -22,000
- Average hourly earnings +0.3% m/m to $37.53, +3.4% y/y
- Revisions: March to +214,000 (from +185,000), April to +179,000 (from +115,000) — combined +93,000
- April CPI ran at 3.8%
VERDICT — CONFIRMED
U.S. nonfarm payrolls rose 172,000 in May 2026, blowing past the Dow Jones consensus of ~80,000-85,000, while the unemployment rate held steady at 4.3% (per the BLS Employment Situation released June 5). Private payrolls added 120,000 and government 52,000; gains concentrated in healthcare (+35,200), manufacturing (+7,000) and social assistance (+12,000), while financial activities shed 22,000 jobs.
Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% on the month to $37.53, up 3.4% year over year. Prior months were revised sharply higher: March to +214,000 (from +185,000) and April to +179,000 (from +115,000), a combined +93,000.
The report defied expectations of a cooling labor market and reinforced a hawkish Fed reaction function: Goldman Sachs dubbed it a 'Payroll Blowout' arguing the Fed needn't worry about jobs, and Principal Asset Management said the data 'argue against cuts.' Markets, already pricing a possible rate HIKE rather than a cut amid the energy-driven inflation surge (April CPI ran at 3.8%), pushed Treasury yields up: the 10-year jumped ~6bp to 4.544% (highest since May 21), the 2-year +11bp to 4.162% (highest since Feb 2025) and the 30-year topped 5.0%. The June 16-17 FOMC is now seen as a near-certain hold at 3.50%-3.75% with hike risk skewed into late 2026/early 2027.
Why it matters
a resilient labor market plus sticky inflation cements the 2026 regime shift from easing to a hawkish hold/hike stance.
Key facts on file
- Nonfarm payrolls +172,000 in May 2026 vs Dow Jones consensus ~80,000–85,000; unemployment 4.3% (BLS, June 5)
- Private payrolls +120,000; government +52,000; healthcare +35,200, manufacturing +7,000, social assistance +12,000; financial activities -22,000
- Average hourly earnings +0.3% m/m to $37.53, +3.4% y/y
- Revisions: March to +214,000 (from +185,000), April to +179,000 (from +115,000) — combined +93,000
- April CPI ran at 3.8%
- 10-year yield +~6bp to 4.544% (highest since May 21); 2-year +11bp to 4.162% (highest since Feb 2025); 30-year topped 5.0%
- June 16–17 FOMC seen as near-certain hold at 3.50%–3.75%
- Goldman Sachs dubbed it 'Payroll Blowout'; Principal Asset Management said data 'argue against cuts'


