178,000 New Jobs in March

Grokmaster

Well-known member
Contributor
As of April 2026, the U.S. labor market showed surprising strength with 178,000 new nonfarm payroll jobs added in March, surpassing expectations and rebounding from a weak February. The national unemployment rate ticked down to 4.3%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Key March 2026 Employment Data (from BLS):
  • Nonfarm Payrolls: +178,000
  • Unemployment Rate: 4.3%
  • Average Hourly Earnings: +$0.09
  • Job Gains: Primarily in healthcare (+76,000), construction, and transportation/warehousing



Not bad at all.
 
Nonfarm Payrolls: +178,000... Not bad at all.
Neutral is historically considered 150k, so that is just 28k above neutral. There is population growth, so even to stand still, we need to have more jobs.

35k of that is strikers returning to work. They are counted as new jobs, but they are just people returning to jobs they already have. Without that the number is 143k, or below the 150k.

trump's economy continues to tread water. Now we will see how it reacts to an oil crisis.
 
Neutral is historically considered 150k, so that is just 28k above neutral. There is population growth, so even to stand still, we need to have more jobs.

35k of that is strikers returning to work. They are counted as new jobs, but they are just people returning to jobs they already have. Without that the number is 143k, or below the 150k.

trump's economy continues to tread water. Now we will see how it reacts to an oil crisis.
It is not bloated with a lot of government jobs.
 
Neutral is historically considered 150k, so that is just 28k above neutral. There is population growth, so even to stand still, we need to have more jobs.

35k of that is strikers returning to work. They are counted as new jobs, but they are just people returning to jobs they already have. Without that the number is 143k, or below the 150k.

trump's economy continues to tread water. Now we will see how it reacts to an oil crisis.
1777637002945.png
 
Well wally, as I said before, I will choose to do the opposite of what you advise, so I will pass on that one.
OK, I have call options on BNO with strikes price centered around $48 expiring on 7/17, and call options on GUSH with strike prices centered around $37 expiring on 9/18. You can get puts on both(the exact opposite of what I am doing) for about BNO at $2.23 and GUSH at $4.60. Honestly, those prices seem high to me, and you cannot get the 20 times returns I thought you could. You would get returns of 5 to 10 times if that investment works out. Good luck with that.
 
OK, I have call options on BNO with strikes price centered around $48 expiring on 7/17, and call options on GUSH with strike prices centered around $37 expiring on 9/18. You can get puts on both(the exact opposite of what I am doing) for about BNO at $2.23 and GUSH at $4.60. Honestly, those prices seem high to me, and you cannot get the 20 times returns I thought you could. You would get returns of 5 to 10 times if that investment works out. Good luck with that.
wally,
NOBODY CARES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
Inflation at 3.5%. Fuel sky high. People need those second jobs just to get by.

February's job numbers were revised down to a 133,000 loss
 
Neutral is historically considered 150k, so that is just 28k above neutral. There is population growth, so even to stand still, we need to have more jobs.

35k of that is strikers returning to work. They are counted as new jobs, but they are just people returning to jobs they already have. Without that the number is 143k, or below the 150k.

trump's economy continues to tread water. Now we will see how it reacts to an oil crisis.
More madeup bullshit; do you ever get tired of puling nonsense out, of your ss and pretending it's "true"?
 
U.S. real GDP grew at an annualized rate of 2.0% in Q1 2026, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) advance estimate. This marks a rebound from a sluggish 0.5% growth rate in late 2025, driven by a post-government shutdown recovery in spending and strong AI-driven business investment, despite missing the expected 2.3% forecast. [1, 2, 3, 4]
Key Q1 2026 GDP Drivers & Data
  • Government Spending: Rebounded sharply, growing at a 9.3% annual rate after the Q4 2025 shutdown, contributing heavily to the headline 2% figure. [1]
  • Business Investment: Surged 8.7% annually, led by strong investment in information processing equipment (AI boom), though residential investment (housing) fell by 8%. [1, 2, 3]
  • Consumer Spending: Rose 1.6% in Q1, slowing from the previous quarter's 1.9%. [1]
  • Inflation: Accelerated, with the PCE price index rising 4.5% compared to 2.9% in the prior quarter, suggesting persistent inflationary pressure. [1]
  • Overall Demand: Real final sales to private domestic purchasers increased 2.5%, indicating underlying demand. [1]
 
Back
Top