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QUICKTAKE

September 5, 2025

What Investors Need to Know about the Jobs Report

The August jobs report came in today—a bit lighter than expected. Unemployment ticked up 0.1% with a slower pace of job creation.


The immediate reaction of the stock market was to celebrate the news—because it probably means more rate cuts, as reflected in today’s slightly lower bonds yields.


The 2-Year Treasury yield now sits at 3.5%, its lowest level of the year.


The S&P 500 Index rose about half a percent immediately after the report was released. The index then faded as the trading day went on and closed slightly down.


Notwithstanding the fact that the S&P 500 remains just shy of all-time highs, the immediate reaction of Democrats, amplified by a sympathetic financial media, is that the economy is in horrible shape… and it’s all Trump’s fault.

Donald Trump’s chaotic tariffs, failed policies, and fake trade deals have strangled job growth and continually raised prices on American families. The pressure is pushing working families closer to the breaking point. - Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (9/5/2025)

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The relationship between employment and stock prices can be a confusing one. As today’s mixed trading shows, investors don’t always quite know how to react.


Our main takeaway: the short-term employment outlook is not disastrous, but it is definitely fragile.


Although clearly not great news for workers, this is on balance positive for investors. It means Fed policy is likely going to get easier, which represents a tailwind for the stock market.


The report should also draw our attention to what may be an even more important consideration for investors: the longer term outlook for labor markets.


AI-related productivity gains—meaning computers replacing people—may already be having some impact on hiring.


The soft jobs number dominated the headlines, but the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) also reported a healthy rise in worker productivity yesterday. Productivity advanced 3.3%, versus 1.5% in the same quarter a year ago.


The AI productivity story is potentially just getting started. Real productivity growth averaged between just 1% and 2% over the past 10 years.


Peeling the onion


The August 2025 BLS report showed a meaningful slowdown in hiring. Approximately 22,000 jobs were added, whereas 75,000 were expected.


The unemployment rate rose to 4.3%, which is the highest since 2021. Prior months were revised down, including a June job loss.


It’s important not to overreact to these numbers.


We still saw net job creation. We are talking about an estimated miss of about 50,000 jobs in an economy that has a civilian labor force, according to the BLS, that amounts to 169 million jobs.


Today’s miss therefore represents only 0.03% of the total workforce.


For perspective, compare these figures to April 2020, after the economy was effectively shut down because of the pandemic. In April 2020, the BLS reported 20.5 million job losses, an all-time record, as unemployment spiked to 14.7%.


It’s equally important not to let political narratives distort our understanding of the data, both in terms of the scale of the labor market weakness and the causes.


The role of tariffs


The financial media, in our view, has a pronounced tendency to connect any and all problematic economic news to Trump policies, with tariffs being the main focus.


Corporate hiring works with a lag, so what may have happened several months ago has the potential to show up in current data.


And it is perfectly fair to say that the April market swoon, following Liberation Day, created uncertainty and complicated decision-making across the business landscape.


But a close look at the industry sectors where job growth disappointed does not really support the “blame tariffs” narrative.


Federal government employment, which declined by 15,000 in August, was the area with the most job losses. Yet this was intentional. The point of D.O.G.E. was to shrink the federal government—and obviously this has nothing to do with the strength of the private sector.


Extractive industries—mining, quarrying, and oil and gas—also saw some job losses, approximately 6,000. But this is largely related to declining energy prices, which, like reducing the scope of federal government, is an objective of the administration.


Manufacturing jobs declined by 12,000, but this included the effect of strike activity (largely Boeing workers) that led to 15,000 job losses in the transportation equipment sector.


Meanwhile, the BLS reported “little change” in employment across a wide range of industries that could have been impacted by tariffs and tariff policy uncertainty.


These industries include “construction, retail trade, transportation and warehousing, information, financial activities, professional and business services, leisure and hospitality, and other services.”


Keeping an eye on AI


Monetary policy is still “restrictive,” as the Fed describes it. This means interest rates are still at high levels that are intended to slow economic growth (in order to help bring down inflation).


To the extent that labor markets are facing cyclical growth headwinds, the Fed has ample room to ease and help stimulate the economy. Investors in the stock market should take comfort in this.


From a longer term perspective, all eyes should be on AI, which may already be influencing employment growth across sectors.


Amazon (AMZN) is the second largest private employer in the country. The company has 1.1 million employees in the United States.


AMZN has also been one of the main drivers of private sector job growth in the United States over the past decade. In 2015, AMZN had approximately 150,000 workers in the U.S. The company’s employee headcount has grown by 600%.


The CEO of AMZN, Andy Jassy, recently shared some thoughts on Generative AI and predicted that the company’s workforce will start to decline as AI is deployed throughout the organization.

We will need fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today, and more people doing other types of jobs. It’s hard to know exactly where this nets out over time, but in the next few years, we expect that this will reduce our total corporate workforce as we get efficiency gains from using AI extensively across the company.  - Andy Jassy, CEO of Amazon (6/17/2025)

Given that Jassy’s note was to a large extent intended for employees, he arguably had an incentive to understate future job reductions, while also preparing his workers for an inevitable reality.


AI has the potential to create a lot of prosperity and economic growth, which itself drives job creation, but it also has the potential to displace a large number of workers in many areas.


While unemployment edged up slightly in August, GDP was revised upward to a quite healthy 3.3% annualized growth rate.


This could be a harbinger of things to come. We may continue to see a pattern of weakness in labor markets, which should translate into mild wage inflation, while AI productivity gains drive strong overall economic growth as well as healthy corporate profit growth.


A scenario like this is problematic for workers, but very good for investors in stocks. It combines earnings growth with what could be easy monetary policy to prop up employment.


So in the future, we could see even more of what we saw today—weak job creation and a positive reaction in the stock market.


As we recently addressed in Surviving (and Thriving) in the AI Economy, AI impacts remain top of mind as we sort through the long-term opportunities that we are pursuing through our various Model Portfolio strategies.

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