The job market is flip flopping like a fish. Following an optimistic January jobs report, the labor market lost 92,000 jobs in February, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ latest employment situation report. While experts cautioned that one month of job losses should not be taken as gospel about the state of the labor market, it follows a broader trend of uncertainty creating whiplash between job growth and losses in the US. Diving into the data. Since May, the US labor market has flipped between adding and losing jobs each month. February lost 92,000 jobs, January added 126,000, December lost 17,000, and so on. “It feels like we’re getting a whiplash from flip flopping back and forth between job gains and job losses,” Daniel Zhao, Glassdoor’s chief economist, told HR Brew. If employers were hoping for some brevity from a chaotic 2025, they may be out of luck. “If we think back to 2025 the theme of the year was quite clearly uncertainty, and unfortunately, it doesn’t look like that’s changing so far into 2026.” Zoom out. Despite February’s job losses, the overall picture depicts “a job market that is flattening, rather than falling off a cliff,” Zhao said. For more on what HR needs to know about the jobs report, keep reading here.—PM |