CNBC
01 Jul 2026, 12:15 UTC · 3h ago
Private payrolls rose by 98,000 in June, less than expected, ADP reports
NewsImpactScreener rates every claim in this story for market impact and maps it to the tickers most exposed.

CNBC
01 Jul 2026, 12:15 UTC · 3h ago
NewsImpactScreener rates every claim in this story for market impact and maps it to the tickers most exposed.

What the story claims
4 claims · each scored for market impact
Private sector employment grew by 98,000 in June, missing the Dow Jones consensus forecast of 110,000. — Lower than expected hiring suggests a cooling labor market, which can signal slowing economic growth.
-0.40Leisure and hospitality added only 2,000 positions, continuing a slow trend for a key indicator of consumer demand. — Weakness in a primary consumer-facing sector suggests a potential decline in household spending and economic resilience.
-0.30Annual pay gains for employees remaining in their jobs held steady at 4.4%. — Persistent wage growth above 4% may keep inflationary pressures alive, potentially delaying central bank rate cuts.
-0.20Continue reading
6 related stories
Top 1 mover · tap to explore
Education and health services accounted for nearly half of June's total employment growth with 48,000 additions. — Concentrated growth in healthcare indicates sector-specific resilience but suggests broader economic hiring is uneven.
Which stocks this story touches
The company is mentioned as the source of the employment report, but no news affecting its own business performance is provided.
Free · No account
Get a free daily PDF briefing — the last 24 hours of news, with summaries and the market-impact score for each story, delivered an hour before the open.
We’ll watch
Pre-filled from this story — remove any you don’t want. Add more tickers & tags or fine-tune your watchlist anytime — every email has an edit link, no account needed.
Free forever · one email a day, max · unsubscribe in one click.How it works
How the impact breaks down
Where the story's weight lands
Stocks most exposed
Modeled from each name's sensitivity to this story

WSJ
2h ago