In a notable shift in the foreign exchange market, the U.S. dollar experienced a decline against the Japanese yen on Tuesday following a significant revision of job creation figures by the government. Estimates revealed that the U.S. economy created nearly one million fewer jobs from April 2024 to March 2025 than previously indicated, signaling a more fragile labor market than earlier reports suggested.
The dollar’s value briefly continued to drop after the revealing payroll revisions, landing at 147.94 yen, marking a 0.3% decrease for the day. Despite this setback against the yen, the dollar showed resilience against other currencies, rebounding from losses incurred on Monday, as investors prepared for the upcoming U.S. consumer prices index data, set to be released on Thursday.
According to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the downward revision translated to a staggering reduction of 911,000 jobs in the 12 months leading up to March. Further compounding the issue, previous data for the same period through March 2024 had already slashed employment figures by 598,000 jobs. Analysts from Action Economics noted that this downward revision represented the largest on record, surpassing even the declines seen during the financial crisis in March 2009 and the previous year.
The data implied an average loss of 76,000 jobs per month during the year in question. Michael Ashley Schulman, chief investment officer at Running Point in El Segundo, California, expressed concern over the implications of these revisions, indicating that they raised skepticism regarding job growth while simultaneously increasing pressure on the Federal Reserve to consider potential interest rate cuts. “The only thing growing faster than job-growth skepticism is the pressure on the Federal Reserve,” Schulman remarked, suggesting a dire outlook for economic conditions.
“The revision transforms the job story from a fairy tale into an audit trail,” he continued, highlighting the stark reality that the economy’s supposed job creation story had significantly changed. Meanwhile, the dollar index managed to rise by 0.3% to 97.67, while the euro weakened, trading at $1.1721, down 0.4% for the day. The dollar also gained against the Swiss franc, increasing by 0.3% to 0.7959 franc, showcasing mixed outcomes in a tumultuous financial landscape.


