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Home Blockchain

161,000 US jobs just disappeared after a revision as Bitcoin navigates increasingly messy macro data

by DigestWire member
March 8, 2026
in Blockchain, Crypto Market, Cryptocurrency
0
161,000 US jobs just disappeared after a revision as Bitcoin navigates increasingly messy macro data
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US markets move in seconds when the jobs report hits. February payrolls fell by 92,000 jobs, the unemployment rate rose to 4.4%, and prior months were revised down by 69,000.

Together, that’s 161,000 fewer jobs than the numbers showed at the start of the year.

But the number traders react to first often isn’t the one that lasts, because even bigger revisions can arrive months later.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics has already marked down US job growth by 862,000 for the year through March 2025, raising the possibility that markets and the Federal Reserve are reacting to a labor market that looks stronger in headlines than it does in the final data.

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Feb 22, 2026
·
Andjela Radmilac

The number markets trade isn’t the final number

That’s the real story inside every monthly payroll release. Investors treat the jobs report as one of the most important macro prints, and for good reason.

The second a jobs report lands, treasury yields move, stock-index futures reprice, the dollar swings, and expectations for Fed cuts or delays get rewritten within minutes.

However, the number driving that first reaction is only an estimate. It’s built from a survey, revised as more employer responses come in, and benchmarked later against a much broader set of payroll records.

That means the labor market that traders price in real time is often a draft. Sometimes the later edits are small, but sometimes they change the whole picture.

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Feb 11, 2026
·
Liam 'Akiba' Wright

February was weak, even before the reset

February’s report was soft on its own. BLS said total nonfarm payroll employment fell by 92,000 in the month, while the unemployment rate rose to 4.4%. Health care lost 28,000 jobs, partly because of strike activity, and physician offices alone lost 37,000. Information shed 11,000 jobs.

Federal government employment fell by 10,000 and is now down by 330,000 from its October 2024 peak. Transportation and warehousing lost 11,000 jobs, with couriers and messengers down 17,000.

There was still wage growth in the report. Average hourly earnings rose 0.4% in February and 3.8% from a year earlier.

That matters because it keeps one part of the Fed’s inflation problem alive even as hiring cools. A labor market can weaken and still produce wage pressure, especially when job growth is slowing from levels that had supported consumer spending for a long stretch.

However, revisions for previous months significantly weakened the report.

December was revised from a gain of 48,000 jobs to a loss of 17,000, and January was revised from 130,000 to 126,000.

Together, those changes subtracted 69,000 jobs from the earlier picture.

Investors are always trying to identify direction, and downward revisions tell them the labor market had already been losing momentum before the latest report landed.

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Feb 14, 2026
·
Gino Matos

The 862,000-job revision changes the story

Then comes the larger reset. In its annual benchmark process, BLS reduced the March 2025 level of total nonfarm payroll employment by 862,000 on a not seasonally adjusted basis. On a seasonally adjusted basis, the March 2025 revision was 898,000 lower.

This kind of technical distinction matters to only economists. But the broader takeaway is much simpler: the labor market looked materially stronger in real time than it did once BLS compared the survey estimate with fuller employment records.

That large a number is no minor statistical cleanup. It’s a reminder that one of the most market-sensitive data releases in the world is not a direct count of every US job. The first number is a high-quality estimate built for speed; the latter benchmark is the one that’s built for completeness.

But when the gap between the two becomes this wide, it starts shaping the macro story.

The benchmark revision also changes how investors should think about the last year. A labor market that appeared resilient in real time helped support the case that the economy could live with restrictive rates.

A labor market that turns out to have created far fewer jobs makes that reading less secure. The data completely changed the balance of the argument.

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Mar 6, 2026
·
Liam 'Akiba' Wright

Why does the data change so much?

The monthly payroll figure comes from the Current Employment Statistics survey, which samples employers rather than counting every payroll in the country. While it’s very large and incredibly useful, it’s still just a sample.

Monthly revisions happen because additional employer reports arrive after the first release, and seasonal factors are recalculated.

The annual benchmark goes even further by aligning the survey with the Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages, which is based largely on unemployment insurance tax records and covers most of the payroll universe.

That creates an unavoidable tension for markets. Traders need a number immediately, so they trade the estimate. The Fed has to work with the same real-time information even while knowing later revisions may reshape it.

There’s no practical solution or alternative to this. Some of the biggest market moves each month are based on numbers that may look meaningfully different once the data is more complete.

This is why payroll revisions aren’t an obscure technical issue. They affect the story investors tell themselves about growth, inflation, and rates. If the labor market looked stronger in the first print than it does in the benchmarked data, then yields, risk sentiment, and rate expectations may all have been set against an economy that was softer than it appeared.

Nonetheless, the initial payroll figure still matters because it’s timely, and timeliness has value. But the benchmark exists because the first number is not the final number, and because speed and completeness are not the same thing.

February’s payroll decline matters, the rise in unemployment to 4.4% matters, and the downward revisions to prior months matter. The 862,000-job benchmark cut may matter the most, because it says the labor market that shaped so much of last year’s macro debate looked firmer in the headline data than it does in the fuller count.

In markets, the first number gets traded. In labor data, it’s not always the one that lasts.

The post 161,000 US jobs just disappeared after a revision as Bitcoin navigates increasingly messy macro data appeared first on CryptoSlate.

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