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dusk#Dusk. $DUSK {spot}(DUSKUSDT) dusk obs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026

dusk

#Dusk. $DUSK
dusk obs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026
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dusk obs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026#dusk $DUSK obs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026 As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending. Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast: •  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation. •  Professional and business services shed 97,000. •  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December. •  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts. This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors. Broader Economic Context 2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI

dusk obs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026

#dusk $DUSK
obs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026

As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData

The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending.

Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers

Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast:

•  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation.

•  Professional and business services shed 97,000.

•  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December.

•  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts.

This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors.

Broader Economic Context

2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
Zobacz tłumaczenie
#dusk $dusk#dusk $DUSK US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026 As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending. Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast: •  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation. •  Professional and business services shed 97,000. •  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December. •  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts. This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors. Broader Economic Context 2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI

#dusk $dusk

#dusk $DUSK

US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026

As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData

The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending.

Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers

Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast:

•  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation.

•  Professional and business services shed 97,000.

•  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December.

•  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts.

This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors.

Broader Economic Context

2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
Zobacz tłumaczenie
#dusk $dusk#dusk $DUSK US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026 As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending. Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast: •  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation. •  Professional and business services shed 97,000. •  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December. •  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts. This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors. Broader Economic Context 2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI

#dusk $dusk

#dusk $DUSK

US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026

As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData

The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending.

Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers

Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast:

•  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation.

•  Professional and business services shed 97,000.

•  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December.

•  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts.

This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors.

Broader Economic Context

2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
Zobacz tłumaczenie
#dusk $DUSK US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026 As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending. Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast: •  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation. •  Professional and business services shed 97,000. •  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December. •  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts. This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors. Broader Economic Context 2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
#dusk $DUSK
US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026
As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData
The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending.
Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers
Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast:
•  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation.
•  Professional and business services shed 97,000.
•  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December.
•  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts.
This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors.
Broader Economic Context
2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
Zobacz tłumaczenie
#dusk $DUSK US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026 As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending. Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast: •  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation. •  Professional and business services shed 97,000. •  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December. •  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts. This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors. Broader Economic Context 2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
#dusk $DUSK
US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026
As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData
The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending.
Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers
Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast:
•  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation.
•  Professional and business services shed 97,000.
•  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December.
•  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts.
This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors.
Broader Economic Context
2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
Zobacz tłumaczenie
#dusk $DUSK US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026 As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending. Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast: •  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation. •  Professional and business services shed 97,000. •  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December. •  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts. This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors. Broader Economic Context 2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
#dusk $DUSK
US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026
As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData
The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending.
Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers
Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast:
•  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation.
•  Professional and business services shed 97,000.
•  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December.
•  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts.
This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors.
Broader Economic Context
2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
Zobacz tłumaczenie
#dusk $DUSK #dusk $DUSK US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026 As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending. Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast: •  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation. •  Professional and business services shed 97,000. •  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December. •  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts. This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors. Broader Economic Context 2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months.
#dusk $DUSK
#dusk $DUSK
US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026
As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData
The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending.
Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers
Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast:
•  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation.
•  Professional and business services shed 97,000.
•  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December.
•  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts.
This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors.
Broader Economic Context
2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months.
Zobacz tłumaczenie
#dusk $DUSK US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026 As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending. Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast: •  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation. •  Professional and business services shed 97,000. •  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December. •  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts. This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors. Broader Economic Context 2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
#dusk $DUSK
US Jobs Data: A Weak End to 2025 Signals Caution for 2026
As of January 11, 2026, the latest US jobs report for December 2025, released on January 9, has solidified concerns about a cooling labor market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that nonfarm payrolls increased by a modest 50,000 jobs, below economists’ expectations of around 60,000–73,000. This capped off 2025 with total job gains of just 584,000—the weakest annual performance outside of recession years since 2003, and a sharp decline from the 2 million jobs added in 2024. #USJobsData
The unemployment rate provided a sliver of relief, dipping to 4.4% from a revised 4.5% in November, as the broader U-6 measure (including discouraged workers and those in part-time roles for economic reasons) eased to 8.4%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-over-month, pushing annual wage growth to 3.8%—outpacing inflation and offering some support to consumer spending.
Sector Breakdown and Key Drivers
Gains were heavily concentrated: Healthcare and social assistance drove much of the growth, adding around 713,000 jobs for the year—accounting for nearly all private-sector gains when combined with other resilient areas like food services. In contrast:
•  Manufacturing lost 68,000 jobs in 2025, hit by tariffs and automation.
•  Professional and business services shed 97,000.
•  Retail trade and construction saw declines in December.
•  Federal government employment dropped significantly due to staffing cuts and buyouts.
This “no hire, no fire” dynamic—characterized by hiring freezes, AI integration, and policy uncertainty—has left the market in a freeze. Excluding healthcare, private-sector growth was nearly flat, highlighting vulnerabilities in tariff-exposed and tech-adjacent sectors.
Broader Economic Context
2025’s labor slowdown was exacerbated by a prolonged federal government shutdown that disrupted data collection (notably skipping October household survey estimates) and contributed to revisions downward in prior months. Tariffs, immigration reforms, and AI
Zobacz tłumaczenie
#DUSKThe U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time. watch these top trending coins closely $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease. This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈 This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.

#DUSK

The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time.
watch these top trending coins closely
$VVV | $CLO | $HYPER
Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease.
This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈
This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
Zobacz tłumaczenie
#wallThe U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time. watch these top trending coins closely $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease. This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈 This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.

#wall

The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time.
watch these top trending coins closely
$VVV | $CLO | $HYPER
Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease.
This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈
This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
Zobacz tłumaczenie
wallThe U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time. watch these top trending coins closely $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease. This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈 This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.

wall

The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time.
watch these top trending coins closely
$VVV | $CLO | $HYPER
Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease.
This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈
This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
Zobacz tłumaczenie
#walrus $WAL The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time. watch these top trending coins closely $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease. This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈 This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
#walrus $WAL The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time.
watch these top trending coins closely
$VVV | $CLO | $HYPER
Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease.
This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈
This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
#walrus $WAL rząd amerykański może mieć potrzebę zwrotu ponad 200 miliardów dolarów, jeśli Sąd Najwyższy orzecze, że tarify Trumpha są niezgodne z prawem w środę. Tak jest – setki miliardów już zebranych może natychmiast zostać zwrócone importerom, a to może znacznie wstrząsnąć rynkami. obserwuj uważnie te najbardziej popularne monety $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Oficjalni urzędnicy skarbowi twierdzą, że USA mają środki, by pokryć te zwroty bez stresu, co oznacza, że gospodarka i rynki nie wybuchną z powodu niedoboru płynności. Dla zwykłych Amerykanów i firm może to być ogromne zwiększenie siły nabywczej, ponieważ koszty handlu spadną, a presja inflacyjna się zmniejszy. To nie jest tylko o tarifach – to strukturalny przeskok makroekonomiczny. Handlowcy, inwestorzy i rynki kryptowalut mogą wszystko reagować ostro. Jeśli zostanie to dobrze obsłużone, może się przekształcić potencjalny kryzys w ogromną korzyść dla rynków, ale jeśli zostanie źle zarządzone, krótkoterminowa wrażliwość może wzrosnąć. Czas się kończy… środę trzeba obserwować. 👀📈 To losowy element gospodarczy z ery Trumpha, który rozgrywa się w czasie rzeczywistym, i wszyscy powinni mu zwracać uwagę.
#walrus $WAL rząd amerykański może mieć potrzebę zwrotu ponad 200 miliardów dolarów, jeśli Sąd Najwyższy orzecze, że tarify Trumpha są niezgodne z prawem w środę. Tak jest – setki miliardów już zebranych może natychmiast zostać zwrócone importerom, a to może znacznie wstrząsnąć rynkami.
obserwuj uważnie te najbardziej popularne monety
$VVV | $CLO | $HYPER
Oficjalni urzędnicy skarbowi twierdzą, że USA mają środki, by pokryć te zwroty bez stresu, co oznacza, że gospodarka i rynki nie wybuchną z powodu niedoboru płynności. Dla zwykłych Amerykanów i firm może to być ogromne zwiększenie siły nabywczej, ponieważ koszty handlu spadną, a presja inflacyjna się zmniejszy.
To nie jest tylko o tarifach – to strukturalny przeskok makroekonomiczny. Handlowcy, inwestorzy i rynki kryptowalut mogą wszystko reagować ostro. Jeśli zostanie to dobrze obsłużone, może się przekształcić potencjalny kryzys w ogromną korzyść dla rynków, ale jeśli zostanie źle zarządzone, krótkoterminowa wrażliwość może wzrosnąć. Czas się kończy… środę trzeba obserwować. 👀📈
To losowy element gospodarczy z ery Trumpha, który rozgrywa się w czasie rzeczywistym, i wszyscy powinni mu zwracać uwagę.
Zobacz tłumaczenie
#walrus $WAL The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time. watch these top trending coins closely $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease. This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈 This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
#walrus $WAL The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time.
watch these top trending coins closely
$VVV | $CLO | $HYPER
Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease.
This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈
This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
Zobacz tłumaczenie
#walrus $WAL The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time. watch these top trending coins closely $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease. This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈 This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
#walrus $WAL The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time.
watch these top trending coins closely
$VVV | $CLO | $HYPER
Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease.
This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈
This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
Zobacz tłumaczenie
#walrus $WAL {spot}(WALUSDT) The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time. watch these top trending coins closely $VVV | $CLO | $HYPER Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease. This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈 This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
#walrus $WAL
The U.S. government may have to refund over $200 billion if the Supreme Court rules Trump’s tariffs illegal this Wednesday. That’s right — hundreds of billions already collected could go straight back to importers, and this could shake up markets big time.
watch these top trending coins closely
$VVV | $CLO | $HYPER
Treasury officials, however, say the U.S. has the cash to cover these refunds without stress, meaning the economy and markets won’t crash from a liquidity shock. For everyday Americans and businesses, this could be a huge boost to spending power, as trade costs drop and inflationary pressures ease.
This is not just about tariffs — it’s a structural macro shift. Traders, investors, and crypto markets could all react sharply. If handled well, it could turn a potential crisis into a massive positive for markets, but if mismanaged, short-term volatility could spike. The clock is ticking… Wednesday is the day to watch. 👀📈
This is a Trump-era economic wildcard playing out in real time, and everyone should be paying attention.
#CreatorPad Rynek kryptowalut wykazuje oznaki kruchości po tym, jak 1 miliard dolarów został zlikwidowany w wyniku niespodziewanego wzrostu Indeksu Cen Producentów (PPI). Bitcoin chwilowo spadł poniżej 112 000 dolarów, gdy traderzy dostosowywali swoje pozycje, podczas gdy ETF-y Ethereum odnotowały silne napływy w wysokości 729 milionów dolarów pomimo turbulencji na rynku. Wrażliwość rynku na wskaźniki makroekonomiczne podkreśla rosnącą korelację między kryptowalutami a tradycyjnymi rynkami. 💬 Czy uważasz, że inwestorzy powinni zmienić sposób zarządzania ryzykiem, ponieważ kryptowaluty działają bardziej jak tradycyjne rynki, czy widzisz to raczej jako szansę na zyski z nowych możliwości rynkowych? 👉 Wykonaj codzienne zadania w Centrum Zadań, aby zdobyć Punkty Binance: •  Stwórz post używając ##MarketTurbulence , •  Podziel się profilem swojego tradera, •  Albo podziel się transakcją używając widgetu, aby zdobyć 5 punktów! (Tapnij „+” na stronie głównej aplikacji Binance i wybierz Centrum Zadań)
#CreatorPad Rynek kryptowalut wykazuje oznaki kruchości po tym, jak 1 miliard dolarów został zlikwidowany w wyniku niespodziewanego wzrostu Indeksu Cen Producentów (PPI). Bitcoin chwilowo spadł poniżej 112 000 dolarów, gdy traderzy dostosowywali swoje pozycje, podczas gdy ETF-y Ethereum odnotowały silne napływy w wysokości 729 milionów dolarów pomimo turbulencji na rynku. Wrażliwość rynku na wskaźniki makroekonomiczne podkreśla rosnącą korelację między kryptowalutami a tradycyjnymi rynkami.
💬 Czy uważasz, że inwestorzy powinni zmienić sposób zarządzania ryzykiem, ponieważ kryptowaluty działają bardziej jak tradycyjne rynki, czy widzisz to raczej jako szansę na zyski z nowych możliwości rynkowych?
👉 Wykonaj codzienne zadania w Centrum Zadań, aby zdobyć Punkty Binance:
•  Stwórz post używając ##MarketTurbulence ,
•  Podziel się profilem swojego tradera,
•  Albo podziel się transakcją używając widgetu, aby zdobyć 5 punktów!
(Tapnij „+” na stronie głównej aplikacji Binance i wybierz Centrum Zadań)
#MarketTurbulence Rynek kryptowalut wykazuje oznaki kruchości po tym, jak $1 miliard w likwidacjach został wywołany niespodziewanym wzrostem Wskaźnika Cen Producentów (PPI). Bitcoin chwilowo spadł poniżej $112,000, gdy traderzy dostosowywali swoje pozycje, podczas gdy ETF-y Ethereum odnotowały silne napływy w wysokości $729 milionów pomimo turbulencji na rynku. Wrażliwość rynku na wskaźniki makroekonomiczne podkreśla rosnącą korelację między kryptowalutami a tradycyjnymi rynkami. 💬 Czy uważasz, że inwestorzy powinni zmienić sposób zarządzania ryzykiem, ponieważ kryptowaluty zachowują się bardziej jak tradycyjne rynki, czy widzisz to bardziej jako szansę na zyski z nowych możliwości rynkowych? 👉 Wykonuj codzienne zadania w Centrum Zadań, aby zdobyć Punkty Binance: •  Stwórz post używając ##MarketTurbulence , •  Podziel się swoim Profilom Tradera, •  Lub podziel się transakcją używając widżetu, aby zdobyć 5 punktów! (Tapnij „+” na stronie głównej aplikacji Binance i wybierz Centrum Zadań)
#MarketTurbulence Rynek kryptowalut wykazuje oznaki kruchości po tym, jak $1 miliard w likwidacjach został wywołany niespodziewanym wzrostem Wskaźnika Cen Producentów (PPI). Bitcoin chwilowo spadł poniżej $112,000, gdy traderzy dostosowywali swoje pozycje, podczas gdy ETF-y Ethereum odnotowały silne napływy w wysokości $729 milionów pomimo turbulencji na rynku. Wrażliwość rynku na wskaźniki makroekonomiczne podkreśla rosnącą korelację między kryptowalutami a tradycyjnymi rynkami.
💬 Czy uważasz, że inwestorzy powinni zmienić sposób zarządzania ryzykiem, ponieważ kryptowaluty zachowują się bardziej jak tradycyjne rynki, czy widzisz to bardziej jako szansę na zyski z nowych możliwości rynkowych?
👉 Wykonuj codzienne zadania w Centrum Zadań, aby zdobyć Punkty Binance:
•  Stwórz post używając ##MarketTurbulence ,
•  Podziel się swoim Profilom Tradera,
•  Lub podziel się transakcją używając widżetu, aby zdobyć 5 punktów!
(Tapnij „+” na stronie głównej aplikacji Binance i wybierz Centrum Zadań)
#CreatorPad Aktualizacja Ethereum Rally Ethereum (#ETH) wykazuje ostatnio silny momentum. Oto kilka kluczowych punktów dotyczących potencjalnego #ETHRally: - *Ostatnia Akcja Cenowa*: Cena Ethereum wykazała znaczną zmianę, osiągając obecnie cenę 4 630,07 USD na dzień 12 sierpnia 2025 roku, co stanowi wzrost o 7,85%. - *Wsparcie i Opór*: Ethereum ma silne wsparcie w okolicach 2,7K-2,76K USD z 2,1 miliona ETH zgromadzonymi w tym przedziale. Przełamanie ponad 2 800 USD może prowadzić do ruchu w kierunku 3 000 USD, a być może nawet wyżej. - *Zainteresowanie Instytucjonalne*: Ostatnie zakupy skarbowe przez firmy takie jak SharpLink Gaming oraz duże wypłaty przez producentów rynku, takie jak Cumberland, mogą wywołać rajd w kierunku 3K USD. - *Aktywność Sieci*: Aktywność sieci Ethereum rośnie, z aktywnymi adresami osiągającymi rekordowy poziom 17,4 miliona w czerwcu, a otwarte zainteresowanie kontraktami terminowymi przekraczającym 41 miliardów USD ¹ ² ³.
#CreatorPad Aktualizacja Ethereum Rally
Ethereum (#ETH) wykazuje ostatnio silny momentum. Oto kilka kluczowych punktów dotyczących potencjalnego #ETHRally:
- *Ostatnia Akcja Cenowa*: Cena Ethereum wykazała znaczną zmianę, osiągając obecnie cenę 4 630,07 USD na dzień 12 sierpnia 2025 roku, co stanowi wzrost o 7,85%.
- *Wsparcie i Opór*: Ethereum ma silne wsparcie w okolicach 2,7K-2,76K USD z 2,1 miliona ETH zgromadzonymi w tym przedziale. Przełamanie ponad 2 800 USD może prowadzić do ruchu w kierunku 3 000 USD, a być może nawet wyżej.
- *Zainteresowanie Instytucjonalne*: Ostatnie zakupy skarbowe przez firmy takie jak SharpLink Gaming oraz duże wypłaty przez producentów rynku, takie jak Cumberland, mogą wywołać rajd w kierunku 3K USD.
- *Aktywność Sieci*: Aktywność sieci Ethereum rośnie, z aktywnymi adresami osiągającymi rekordowy poziom 17,4 miliona w czerwcu, a otwarte zainteresowanie kontraktami terminowymi przekraczającym 41 miliardów USD ¹ ² ³.
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