The March 2026 Bureau of Labor Statistics report showed US nonfarm payrolls surging 178,000—well above expectations—and the unemployment rate easing to 4.3% from February's 4.4%, reflecting labor force dropouts amid solid hiring in sectors like health care and leisure. Initial jobless claims declined to 202,000 for the week ended March 28, underscoring low layoff risks. Yet, Federal Reserve March projections peg Q4 2026 unemployment at a median 4.4%, with CBO forecasting a 4.6% peak as growth moderates. Geopolitical strains from the Iran conflict and rising oil prices cloud the outlook, potentially pressuring corporate margins. Key catalysts include April nonfarm payrolls (May 1 release) and the May FOMC meeting, where labor data could influence rate cut expectations.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$346,020 Vol.
5.0%
36%
5.5%
27%
6.0%
18%
7.0%
15%
10.0%
6%
$346,020 Vol.
5.0%
36%
5.5%
27%
6.0%
18%
7.0%
15%
10.0%
6%
The relevant reports for this market are the Employment Situation Reports for January-December, 2026. This market may not resolve to “No” until the Employment Situation report for December 2026 is released. If no Employment Situation Report for December 2026 is released by March 31, 2027, 11:59 PM ET, however, this market will resolve based on all previously published data up to that time.
The resolution source for this market is the Monthly Employment Situation Report, published by the BLS every month at https://www.bls.gov/bls/news-release/empsit.htm, specifically the U-3 measure in Table A-15 for each month.
Note: the resolution source for this market reports unemployment to one decimal point. Thus, this is the level of precision that will be used when resolving the market.
Market Opened: Jan 2, 2026, 1:53 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...The relevant reports for this market are the Employment Situation Reports for January-December, 2026. This market may not resolve to “No” until the Employment Situation report for December 2026 is released. If no Employment Situation Report for December 2026 is released by March 31, 2027, 11:59 PM ET, however, this market will resolve based on all previously published data up to that time.
The resolution source for this market is the Monthly Employment Situation Report, published by the BLS every month at https://www.bls.gov/bls/news-release/empsit.htm, specifically the U-3 measure in Table A-15 for each month.
Note: the resolution source for this market reports unemployment to one decimal point. Thus, this is the level of precision that will be used when resolving the market.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...The March 2026 Bureau of Labor Statistics report showed US nonfarm payrolls surging 178,000—well above expectations—and the unemployment rate easing to 4.3% from February's 4.4%, reflecting labor force dropouts amid solid hiring in sectors like health care and leisure. Initial jobless claims declined to 202,000 for the week ended March 28, underscoring low layoff risks. Yet, Federal Reserve March projections peg Q4 2026 unemployment at a median 4.4%, with CBO forecasting a 4.6% peak as growth moderates. Geopolitical strains from the Iran conflict and rising oil prices cloud the outlook, potentially pressuring corporate margins. Key catalysts include April nonfarm payrolls (May 1 release) and the May FOMC meeting, where labor data could influence rate cut expectations.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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