Weekly Market Recap (Sept 1–5, 2025): Jobs Stall, Fed Cut Looms, Tech Leads

Weekly Market Recap (September 1–5, 2025)

Stocks rose as a softer jobs report boosted odds of a near-term Fed cut. The Nasdaq led, the S&P 500 followed, and the Dow finished modestly higher. Under the hood, Communication Services outperformed while Energy lagged.

Index Performance (Weekly)

Index Weekly Change
S&P 500+1.03%
Nasdaq+1.98%
Dow Jones+0.23%

Sector Snapshot (1-Week)

Sector Performance — Week of Sep 1–5

Positive bars extend right of zero; negatives left. Scale normalized to the week’s largest absolute move.

Communication Services
+4.10%
Basic Materials
+1.62%
Healthcare
+1.34%
Consumer Defensive
+1.02%
Real Estate
+0.98%
Consumer Cyclical
+0.77%
Financial
−1.01%
Technology
−1.24%
Industrials
−1.26%
Utilities
−1.27%
Energy
−2.46%

AI Picks Performance

Stock Weekly Return Comment
UnitedHealth (UNH) +2.13% Defensive growth bid amid softer labor data
Newmont (NEM) +0.41% Gold steady; rate-cut hopes offset risk appetite
Arista Networks (ANET) +5.14% Networking leadership continued; AI datacenter spend

Macro Focus — Hiring Stalled in August, With 22,000 New Jobs

August payrolls slowed to just +22,000, reinforcing a summer-long hiring fade. The jobless rate edged up to 4.3% and earlier months were revised, including June swinging to a 13,000 loss—the first decline since late 2020. Since May, job creation has averaged roughly 26,750 per month, leaving year-to-date gains at about 598,000, the weakest (ex-2020) since 2009.

Losses were broad based: manufacturing (−12k), construction (−7k), and professional/business services (−17k) fell. Healthcare and social assistance added ~46.8k, cushioning the headline. Federal payrolls dropped by ~15k, with larger cuts expected as deferred resignations roll off later this year. Longer searches are showing up in the data: the share unemployed 27+ weeks climbed to 25.7%, and the unemployment rate for Black workers rose to 7.5%.

Weaker hiring alongside tighter immigration appears to be slowing both labor demand and supply, which helps explain why unemployment is drifting higher even as job gains diminish. Markets now see a September Fed cut as very likely, though equities were mixed—easier policy won’t immediately fix soft demand or policy uncertainty.

Unemployment rate 0% 2% 4% 6% 8% ’21 ’22 ’23 ’24 ’25 August: 4.3% Note: Seasonally adjusted Source: Labor Department

Outlook

  • Policy path: The data all but locks in a September cut; watch Fedspeak and claims for confirmation.
  • Positioning: Communication Services momentum persists; evaluate Energy after a −2.46% week.
  • Earnings lens: Listen for hiring freezes or cautious headcount plans in guidance.

Key Takeaway

A cooling labor market lifted rate-cut odds and tech leadership, while cyclical pockets softened. Defensive growth (Healthcare) and select AI infrastructure names outperformed.

Week ended September 5, 2025. Data: market indexes & public releases.

Data & Methods: Market indexes from TradingView, sector performance via Finviz, macro data from FRED, and company filings/earnings reports (SEC EDGAR). Charts and commentary are produced using Google Sheets, internal AI workflows, and the author’s analysis pipeline.
Reviewed by Luke, AI Finance Editor
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Luke — AI Finance Editor

Luke translates complex markets into beginner-friendly insights using AI-powered tools and real-world experience. Learn more →

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