The U.S. economy unexpectedly lost 92,000 jobs in February, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday, marking the worst monthly decline since last October and a sharp miss against expectations for a 60,000 gain.
The unemployment rate rose to 4.4%, and December’s surprisingly good report was also revised into negative territory, meaning payrolls have now contracted in two of the last three months.
Heather Long, Navy Federal Credit Union’s chief economist, pointed out the U.S. economy has now lost jobs on net since April 2025. From last May through last month, total payroll change stands at -19,000. “Companies are not hiring in the face of all of these headwinds and uncertainty,” she wrote on X. “And even healthcare is starting to slow down.”
The one-engine economy loses its engine
For the better part of the last year, the U.S. labor market has tiptoed into stability on a narrow base. A San Francisco Fed analysis published in January found that education and health services had driven almost all sustained job growth in 2025, while every other major sector sat flat or declined.
In February, it seems, that narrow base itself has evaporated. Health care shed 28,000 jobs after adding 77,000 in January — a reversal driven by a Kaiser strike. Omair Sharif, an expert GDP analyst, remarked that the we have a “labor market so soft that it cannot withstand a strike of -31k physicians in health care, because no one else is hiring.”
Federal government employment, once seen as a fragile pillar of support, dropped another 10,000, extending a contraction of 330,000 positions since October 2024. Information lost 11,000, as did transportation and warehousing. Private-sector payrolls fell 86,000.
When the economy has a broad-based expansion, a temporary disruption in one sector, like healthcare, gets absorbed easily. In an economy where one industry carries the weight, it shows up as a national payroll decline. Long called the report “dismal.”
War and oil shocks
The jobs data landed in the middle of a week dominated by a geopolitical shock. The U.S.-Israeli campaign against Iran, now in its sixth day, has paralyzed shipping through the Strait of Hormuz — a chokepoint for roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and LNG supply. Brent crude has surged to $90 a barrel Friday from $70 before the strikes began.
The problem is duration. If energy prices stay elevated, the inflation impact compounds and the rate cuts that markets have been counting on disappear. Morningstar Wealth’s Dominic Pappalardo said “if we continue to see increasing energy prices sparking inflation concerns, it will be much more difficult for the Fed to implement those two forecasted rate cuts in 2026.”
However, add in an even softer labor market than expected, and suddenly the Fed is back to where it remembers being post-pandemic: between “a rock and a hard place,” Ellen Zentner from Morgan Stanley wrote in a note.
AI displacement
Only there’s a new fear in 2026, one more prominent than in previous stagflationary times. Employee fears of losing their job to AI have jumped from 28% in 2024 to 40% in 2026, according to Mercer’s Global Talent Trends survey. Deutsche Bank analysts wrote in January that this anxiety would go “from a low hum to a loud roar” this year.
The jobs report doesn’t tell us much about AI job cuts. However, Brad Conger, chief investment officer at Hirtle Callaghan, offered a framework that bridges both the cyclical and the structural forces: AI isn’t replacing jobs yet, he argued, but “job cuts ARE funding AI expenditures.” Block’s recent shock decision to eliminate 40% of its workforce fits the pattern, he said—headcount reduction justified not by what AI can do today, but by what companies expect it to do next.
Blackrock CIO Rick Rieder said AI-driven productivity gains are “unequivocal,” as cognitive technology replaces cognitive thinking. But he stressed that labor-intensive reinvestment — in manufacturing, real estate, semiconductor production — has to happen to absorb the displacement. That reinvestment hasn’t materialized at scale, and it doesn’t show up in the jobs report; construction, manufacturing, mining were all flat.
Will the Fed cut soon?
The Dow fell 903 points at market open Friday, or 1.9%, after the report. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq each dropped 1.6%.
Fed Governor Chris Waller said earlier on Bloomberg Friday that if February looked weak and January was revised down, the question would arise about why the Fed is “sitting on its hands.” Both conditions were met.
January’s 130,000 gain quieted the pessimists, proving that the labor market had found a floor. February’s data reframes that report as an outlier. Natixis’s Christopher Hodge dismissed the recent encouraging prints as “fool’s gold,” and the data now gives the Fed’s doves — Waller chief among them — the ammunition to push for cuts.
Written by Eva Roytburg for Fortune as “The abysmal February jobs report shatters hopes of a labor market recovery for 2026 and leaves the Fed ‘between a rock and a hard place’” and republished with permission.















