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U.S. Hiring Jumped By 655,000 In March. Job Openings Stayed Flat

Published May 5, 2026
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Summary:
  • Hires rose to 5.6 million in March, up 655,000 from February, per the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
  • Job openings held steady at 6.9 million, with the rate at 4.1%.
  • Quits stayed at 3.2 million, down 285,000 over the past year.

The labor market just sent investors a mixed signal.

Hiring picked up sharply, while openings barely moved.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics put out its March JOLTS report Tuesday. The standout number was hires.

Firms added 5.6 million people to payrolls during the month. That more than offset February's slowdown. Openings held flat at 6.9 million.

Where the hiring happened

The biggest gains came from a small group of industries. Transportation, warehousing, and utilities pulled in another 108,000 hires.

Professional and business services added 165,000. Hotels and restaurants picked up another 124,000.

The federal government was the lone weak spot, where hiring edged down a bit.

The hires rate, which tracks hires as a share of total jobs, rose to 3.5%. That's the strongest move in either direction in months.

What the numbers mean

Job openings held flat at 6.9 million, with the rate at 4.1%. Posted jobs fell sharply in professional and business services, down 318,000. Finance and insurance added 98,000 openings.

Some context. Openings have come down a long way. They peaked above 12 million in 2022 and now sit close to pre-pandemic norms of about 7 million.

Quits, which measure how confident workers feel about jumping to a new gig, sat at 3.2 million in March. That's down 285,000 from a year earlier.

Layoffs barely moved at 1.9 million, but they're up 272,000 over the year.

That combo, fewer voluntary quits and more involuntary layoffs, is the picture of a more cautious labor market.

The Fed angle

For the Federal Reserve, the report doesn't force a move in either direction. Hiring is healthy. Wage pressure isn't building.

The labor market is settling into a calmer pace.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell has said many times that the central bank wants to see a balanced jobs market before cutting rates again. A March print with strong hires and steady openings checks that box.

It also gives policy makers cover to wait. With inflation still bumpy and tariffs working through the data, the Fed has reasons not to rush.

The market read

Stocks moved a bit on the print. Treasury yields ticked higher as investors took the strong hires number as a sign the economy is still on solid footing.

Yields are the rate of return investors get for holding a bond. When they rise, it usually means the market expects fewer rate cuts ahead, since the Fed only cuts when growth or jobs slow.

That's the read on this report. Hiring is fine. The Fed is in no rush.

The next big check on the labor market is the monthly jobs report, which comes out on the first Friday of each month. JOLTS, this report, captures a slightly different cut, but the two often move together.

What to watch

The hires bounce-back is the headline. It says firms are still bringing people in, not just posting jobs.

But the gap between openings and hires is narrowing. Firms aren't posting more roles, they're filling the ones already on the board.

For investors, the signal to track is whether April's report keeps the same pattern. A second month of strong hires with flat openings would point to a labor market that's still tight, but for a new reason. Firms can't keep posting endlessly.

April JOLTS is out June 2.

Disclosure

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