The ADP reported on Wednesday that companies had suddenly delayed employment in April as they withstanded the potential impact of President Donald Trump’s tariffs on US trading partners.
Private sector salaries rose at just 62,000 during that month, the lowest profit since July 2024, and have increased uncertainty regarding the extent of tariffs and their impact on the recruitment plans and the broader economic situation.
The total slowed from the revised profits down below 147,000 in March, missing out on the Dow Jones Consensus estimates with an increase of 120,000.
“Anxiety is the word of the day. Employers are trying to adjust for the implementation of almost positive economic data and policy and consumer uncertainty,” said Nella Richardson, ADP chief economist. “Making employment decisions in this environment can be difficult.”
Additionally, wage increases have been a step backwards, up 4.5% from a year ago for those staying at work, which has dropped by 0.1 percentage points since March. However, the job changer increased to 6.9%, up 0.2 percentage points.
From a sectoral perspective, leisure and hospitality recorded the biggest profits, adding 27,000 jobs. Others that showed an increase include trade, transportation and utility (21,000), financial activities (20,000), and construction (16,000). Education and health services lost 23,000 positions, while information services fell 8,000 times.
The ADP estimate serves as a precursor to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Friday non-farm pay data, with the two reports being significantly different. The economists surveyed by Dow Jones are looking for 133,000 job growth in a BLS report. This is different from the fact that ADP includes government employment. The unemployment rate is expected to remain unchanged at 4.2%.