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On Wall Street, analysts increasingly don’t believe the U.S. government’s ‘misleading’ job numbers

July 3, 2026
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On Wall Street, analysts increasingly don’t believe the U.S. government’s ‘misleading’ job numbers

Jamie Cox, a managing partner at Harris Financial Group in Richmond, Virginia (with $1.3 billion in assets under management), had a visceral reaction to the June jobs number from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics: “These data are misleading and should be disregarded,” he said in an email to Fortune. “There is zero chance leisure and hospitality posts a negative print in the midst of the World Cup. Revisions higher in the next few months are coming.” He’s not alone. Increasingly, analysts and economists at major banks and financial institutions are saying they don’t believe the numbers. Partly, this is a routine function of the way in which the U.S. government collects economic stats. It takes time to gather all the survey data needed to describe hiring (nonfarm payrolls, in the official lingo), and the BLS publishes a series of revisions to its numbers as the months go by. So not believing the initial figure is par for the course. The numbers will always be revised later as straggling data sets and survey responses trickle in. This chart from Pantheon Macroeconomics shows the scale of the revisions over time—usually downward:

But this time, there was a number in the jobs data that, on its face, stands out as being implausible: The leisure and hospitality sector lost 61,000 jobs in June, the BLS reported, even though the U.S. is hosting the single largest sporting event on the planet—the World Cup. Is it really likely that dozens of soccer matches, followed by hundreds of thousands of domestic fans and foreign tourists, somehow resulted in fewer people being employed in hotels, bars, and restaurants?

Pimco economist Tiffany Wilding said the sector “was actually expected to benefit from World Cup hiring.”

RSM Chief Economist Joe Brusuelas said in an email that the report should be taken “with a grain of salt.” “Expect an upward revision to the top-line June estimate when the July data is released,” he said.

There is good evidence that the World Cup has juiced economic activity recently. This chart from Bank of America shows card spending was up 5.4% year-on-year over the group stage of the cup. “The boost is being particularly driven by ‘non-locals’ coming into the cities for the matches, whose spending was up 17.4%,” BofA Institute’s Liz Everett Krisberg and David Tinsley said in an email.

“The U.S. employment report was a convenient reminder not to put too much emphasis onto a single unreliable data release,” Paul Donovan of UBS said in an email this morning. “There were notable revisions, and the details showed swings in seasonal adjustments moving the figures in a rather maladjusted manner. The trends are still the same. In an uncertain policy environment, companies seem reluctant to hire, but are also not rushing to fire.”

At EY-Parthenon, Chief Economist Gregory Daco was also taken aback by the weak hospitality number, although he stopped short of saying it might be wrong. “The biggest black eye in June came from the leisure and hospitality sector shedding 61k jobs—the largest decline since the pandemic—on weak seasonal hiring, despite the hype around the World Cup,” he said in an email.

Overall, the U.S. economy added 57,000 jobs in June, about half the number that was expected, the BLS reported yesterday. The Financial Times suggested that the surprisingly weak hospitality numbers explain why the consensus estimate was wrong:

“There may be a way to explain away the bad month, however. Employment in hospitality and leisure might have been expected to rise in June, in the run-up to the North American edition of the World Cup… But, strangely, the sector crashed hard, losing 61,000 jobs,” Robert Armstrong wrote.

“A statistical blip? It’s possible, and if you take out the hospitality losses, we would be talking about a nice four-month trend.”

The post On Wall Street, analysts increasingly don’t believe the U.S. government’s ‘misleading’ job numbers appeared first on Fortune.

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