Free NewsletterPro Login

Companies Added 42,000 Jobs in October But Small Business Hiring Remains Weak

A stylized illustration of a cylindrical cup with blue arrows and lines indicating a swirling or rotational motion inside the cup.
Published Nov 5, 2025
Share:
A white balance scale on a blue background with a wrench and fist on one side and a dollar symbol on the other. BriefsFinance logo in the bottom right corner.
Summary:
  • Private companies added 42,000 jobs in October, beating the 22,000 estimate and following September's 29,000 decline
  • All job creation came from large companies (250+ workers) which added 76,000 jobs, while small businesses lost 34,000
  • The report takes on extra importance as the government shutdown has suspended the official BLS jobs data, which would have shown expected losses of 60,000

The Beat

Private payrolls grew more than expected in October. Companies added 42,000 jobs, topping the 22,000 consensus estimate, according to ADP.

September was revised to show 29,000 jobs lost, 3,000 fewer than initially reported. The October gain provides some hope the labor market isn't sinking rapidly.

Trade, transportation and utilities led with 47,000 jobs added. Education and health services grew by 26,000, while financial activities added 11,000.

The Losses

Not all sectors showed growth. Despite the AI boom, information services lost 17,000 positions. Other sectors posting declines:

  • Professional and business services: -15,000
  • Other services: -13,000
  • Manufacturing: -3,000

Manufacturing continues struggling despite President Trump's tariffs aimed at bringing factory jobs back to the US.

The Small Business Problem

All job creation came from large companies. Firms with 250+ workers added 76,000 jobs. Meanwhile, smaller businesses lost 34,000.

That's a concerning trend. Small businesses are responsible for three of every four jobs, noted ADP's chief economist Nela Richardson.

"While big companies make headlines, small companies drive hiring," Richardson told CNBC. "So to see that weakness at the small company level is still a concern, and I think that's one of the reasons why the recovery has been so tepid."

Wages Still Rising

Despite weak job growth, pay continues climbing. Workers staying in their jobs saw 4.5% year-over-year raises, same as September. Job switchers got 6.7% bumps, up slightly from last month.

"Pay growth has been largely flat for more than a year, indicating that shifts in supply and demand are balanced," Richardson said.

By ADP's count, job growth has averaged about 60,000 monthly but tailed off significantly in the second half of the year.

The Data Vacuum

This ADP report matters more than usual because the government shutdown has suspended official data. The Bureau of Labor Statistics, like all government agencies, stopped data collection and releases.

Had the BLS report been released Friday, Wall Street expected it to show 60,000 jobs lost and unemployment rising to 4.5%.

Without that official data, the ADP report becomes the primary window into labor market health. Other indicators this week include Challenger layoff announcements Thursday and state-level jobless claims.

Recent data from jobs site Indeed shows employment postings at their lowest since February 2021 - another worrying sign.

Fed's Concern

Federal Reserve officials have expressed concern over the labor market. It's now overtaken inflation as the central bank's primary focus.

The Fed approved a quarter-point rate cut last week, bringing the key rate to 3.75%-4%. More cuts may come if labor weakness continues.

Fed policymakers will scrutinize whatever data they can get during the shutdown to gauge whether the job market is stabilizing or deteriorating.

The Bottom Line

The 42,000 jobs added beats expectations and looks better than September's losses. But the details reveal underlying weakness.

Small businesses losing 34,000 jobs while large companies add 76,000 suggests the recovery is narrow and fragile. With small firms responsible for most hiring, their struggles matter enormously.

Manufacturing declining despite tariffs shows Trump's trade policy hasn't delivered the promised factory job boom. Tech shedding 17,000 information services jobs despite AI hype reveals that not all sectors are benefiting from the technology boom.

The government shutdown creates a frustrating information vacuum. Without official BLS data, policymakers and investors must rely on private surveys like ADP. While useful, these don't capture the full picture of employment, unemployment, and labor force participation.

ADP showing 42,000 gains while Wall Street expected the official report to show 60,000 losses highlights significant divergence. That gap makes it harder to assess labor market health accurately.

Pay growth remaining steady at 4.5% for existing workers suggests the job market isn't collapsing. If employment were in freefall, wage growth would be decelerating faster.

But averaging 60,000 monthly job gains this year - and slowing in the second half - isn't strong growth. It's barely keeping pace with population growth and labor force expansion.

The Fed cutting rates signals concern about labor market weakness. If October's modest gains represent stabilization, that's positive. If they're just a temporary blip before further deterioration, the Fed may need to cut more aggressively.

For workers, the bifurcation matters. Large company employees see relative stability. Small business workers face uncertainty as their employers shed jobs. That divide could widen if small businesses continue struggling.

The next few months will be critical. If job growth remains weak and small businesses keep cutting, recession fears will intensify. If hiring stabilizes and broadens to include smaller firms, the labor market may have found a soft landing.

Right now, we're in uncomfortable territory - not collapsing but not thriving either. And with the government shutdown blocking official data, the uncertainty only grows.

Disclosure

Get Market Briefs delivered to your inbox every morning for free!

No fluff. No noise. No politics. Just finance news you can read in 5 minutes.

Blogs

April 29, 2026
What Is Blockchain? A Plain English Guide For Investors
  • Blockchain is a digital ledger that records every transaction on a public network.
  • Once a transaction is recorded, it cannot be changed or deleted.
  • It is the foundation of Bitcoin, Ethereum, and thousands of other cryptocurrencies.
Read More
April 29, 2026
How To Negotiate Bills: The Script That Saves You Hundreds A Year
  • Most monthly bills are negotiable, even though most Americans never try.
  • A simple phone call with the right script can lower your phone, internet, and utility bills.
  • The key rule is to be nice. Customer service reps have more flexibility than most people realize.
Read More
April 29, 2026
75 15 10 Rule: The Budget That Builds Wealth On Autopilot
  • The 75 15 10 rule is a budgeting plan: spend at most 75% of your income, invest at least 15%, and save at least 10%.
  • It works by making sure you pay yourself before you spend.
  • Once your savings target is hit, you shift the 10% over to investing, becoming a 75/25 plan.
Read More
April 29, 2026
How To Rebalance Portfolio: The Strategy That Forces You To Buy Low And Sell High
  • Rebalancing means adjusting your portfolio back to your target allocation when it drifts too far.
  • The two main methods are time-based (rebalance once a year) and threshold-based (rebalance when allocation drifts more than 5%).
  • If you are still adding money, you can rebalance by directing new money instead of selling.
Read More
April 29, 2026
How To Buy Treasury Bonds: A Beginner's Guide
  • Treasury bonds are loans you make to the U.S. government. They are considered the safest investment in the world.
  • You can buy them at TreasuryDirect.gov directly or through any major brokerage.
  • There are three main types: T-Bills, Treasury Notes, and Treasury Bonds. The longer the term, the higher the interest rate.
Read More
April 29, 2026
Forward Vs Futures Contracts: What's The Real Difference?
  • Both forward and futures contracts are deals to buy or sell something at a set price on a future date.
  • Futures trade on exchanges. Forwards are private deals between two parties.
  • Most regular investors do not use either. They are mostly tools for businesses and big institutions.
Read More
April 29, 2026
Alternative Investments Explained: What They Are And Why They Matter
  • Alternative investments are anything that is not a regular stock or bond.
  • The most common types are precious metals, crypto, real estate, commodities, and collectibles.
  • Most investors should hold 5% to 25% of their portfolio in alternatives, depending on risk tolerance.
Read More
April 29, 2026
How To Buy Bitcoin For Beginners: 3 Simple Ways
  • There are three main ways to buy Bitcoin: directly on an exchange, through a Bitcoin ETF, or through a Bitcoin miner stock.
  • Each has its own pros, cons, and tax setup.
  • Most beginners do best starting small and using dollar cost averaging.
Read More
April 29, 2026
How To Follow Smart Money: The 5 Market Shifts Framework
  • "Smart money" means big investors with deep research teams and fast information.
  • You can follow them by watching for 5 types of market shifts.
  • The goal is to spot where money is moving before it shows up on CNBC.
Read More
April 29, 2026
Insider Trading Meaning: What It Really Is (And Why Some Of It Is Legal)
  • Insider trading means buying or selling a stock based on facts the public does not know yet.
  • Some insider trading is legal. Some is a federal crime that can send people to prison.
  • The SEC tracks every legal insider trade in a public file called Form 4.
Read More
1 2 3 19
Share via
Copy link