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US Unemployment Rate Hits 4.3%, Highest Since October 2021 - Here’s Why Crypto Bulls Should Care

US Unemployment Rate Hits 4.3%, Highest Since October 2021 - Here’s Why Crypto Bulls Should Care

Published:
2025-09-05 15:23:00
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Economic tremors send traditional markets reeling as unemployment spikes to 4.3%—the highest level since late 2021.

FED PRESSURE MOUNTS

Policymakers face renewed calls for intervention as labor markets show unexpected softening. That 4.3% print screams economic cooling louder than any analyst forecast.

CRYPTO'S HEDGE NARRATIVE GAINS TRACTION

Bitcoin and major altcoins already pricing in potential monetary policy shifts. When traditional employment stumbles, digital assets often sprint—just ask anyone who lived through the last cycle.

INSTITUTIONAL EYES WIDEN

Hedge funds and family offices recalibrating portfolios as macro indicators flash amber. Gold's boring, bonds are broken—where else does smart money hide?

THE IRONY OF TRADITIONAL FINANCE

Wall Street still trying to short crypto while unemployment data validates the very decentralization thesis that threatens their legacy model. They'll learn eventually—probably after another 20% drop in the S&P.

🇺🇸US unemployment rate rises to 4.3%, highest since October 2021.

— Watcher.Guru (@WatcherGuru) September 5, 2025

Another Disappointing US Jobs Report

Over the past three months, the US economy has created fewer than 30,000 new jobs, on average. The decline led to US President Donald TRUMP firing the Commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics in July. Diving deeper into the latest statistics, average hourly earnings rose 0.3% over the past month and 3.7% over the prior year in August. Wall Street expected hourly earnings to have increased 0.3% over the prior month and 3.7% over last year.

“August’s Employment Report confirmed that the labor market has headed off a cliff-edge,” Capital Economics North America economist Bradley Saunders wrote in a report on Friday. He went on to add that this jobs report could have an impact on a potential interest rate cut this month. “While the weak 22,000 gain in non-farm payrolls in August confirms what already looked like a nailed-on rate cut at this month’s FOMC meeting, the limited rise in the unemployment rate to 4.3% will curb calls for a larger 50bp move.”

Furthermore, for the first time since before the pandemic, there are now more unemployed workers than there are job openings. Still, businesses have become more hesitant to hire because of softer sales and uncertainty about how much the Trump administration’s tariffs will cost them. A rate cut could slow the decline in unemployment, but August’s decline is especially of concern with schools reopening and educational employees returning to work.

|Square

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