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Wednesday Jun 3 2026 13:20
3 min
As the United States embarks on its summer hiring season, the labor market is signaling a robustness that has surpassed initial expectations. According to data released by human resources services giant ADP on Wednesday, the U.S. private sector added a net 122,000 jobs in May. This figure not only surpasses the revised April figure of 105,000 but also significantly exceeds the 110,000 jobs predicted by Dow Jones economists. This data marks the strongest single-month performance for the private sector since January 2025, further cementing the notion that the U.S. employment landscape is on a firmer recovery trajectory after a period of volatility.
Unlike previous months where job growth was highly concentrated in specific sectors like healthcare, May's employment market exhibited a welcome trend of 'broad gains'. As Nela Richardson, Chief Economist at ADP, noted, "The job creation in May was broader based than we've seen in the past few years. As we enter the summer hiring season, the labor market is showing sustained momentum."
Across the ten industries tracked by ADP, eight sectors registered growth. While the education and healthcare services sector continued to lead with 57,000 new positions, the widespread recovery in trade, transportation, and utilities (+36,000), professional and business services (+11,000), and the construction and leisure and hospitality sectors (0.8 million each) indicates a diffusion of endogenous economic growth drivers.
However, the impact of technological advancements on employment is also beginning to surface. The information services sector saw a decrease of 9,000 jobs in May. Analysts suggest this may be linked to adjustments in certain roles due to the increasing prevalence and application of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies. Additionally, the mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction sector experienced a minor reduction of 3,000 positions.
Alongside the focus on job numbers, shifts in wage data remain a critical concern for the market. The data indicates that the annual wage increase for job stayers remained steady at 4.4% in May, unchanged from the previous month. For job switchers, the wage growth moderated slightly to 6.5%. This stable, and slightly cooling, trend in wage progression offers some relief from inflation worries.
Looking at business size, small businesses (under 50 employees) continue to be the primary engine for job absorption, contributing 67,000 positions. Large businesses (over 500 employees) followed closely, adding 40,000 new employees.
The robust performance of the ADP data for May sets an optimistic tone for the official jobs report from the Department of Labor, due this Friday. The market consensus currently anticipates a nonfarm payroll increase of approximately 80,000 jobs in May, with the unemployment rate holding steady at a historically low 4.3%.
For the Federal Reserve, this employment report serves as a crucial reference point ahead of its policy meeting on June 16-17. The market is overwhelmingly expecting the Fed to maintain its benchmark interest rate range of 3.5%-3.75% unchanged.
Despite the strong May ADP figures, the previously released April JOLTS Job Openings report revealed a different facet of the economic picture. The number of job openings unexpectedly surged to 7.618 million at the end of April, reaching a nearly two-year high. However, this may not represent market overheating but rather 'data noise'.
Analysis suggests that the substantial rise in job openings was concentrated in the professional and business services sector, while actual hiring declined by 419,000. This phenomenon of 'high openings, low hiring' reflects employer caution in actual decision-making, despite potential labor needs, against a backdrop of high external uncertainty, such as regional geopolitical tensions and fluctuating energy prices.
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