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U.S. Private Hiring Stalls at Start of 2026, Deepening Concerns About a Softening Labor Market

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The U.S. labor market opened 2026 on a notably weak footing, with private-sector hiring barely registering in January and reinforcing signs that the economy has settled into a prolonged slowdown rather than a sharp downturn.

New data from payroll processor ADP show that employers added just 22,000 jobs during the month, a figure that fell short of already muted expectations and underscored how narrow the sources of job growth have become.

The January gain was lower than December’s downwardly revised 37,000 increase and well below the Dow Jones forecast of 45,000. The headline number also masks a deeper fragility in the job market. Without a surge of 74,000 hires in education and health services, private employment would have declined outright. That concentration highlights the extent to which hiring momentum is no longer broad-based, but instead relies heavily on one structurally resilient sector.

Health care and education have been the primary engines of U.S. job growth for more than a year, driven by demographic pressures, persistent staffing shortages, and steady demand that is relatively insulated from interest-rate cycles. January’s data show that this dynamic has not changed. By contrast, most other sectors either grew marginally or contracted, suggesting that businesses remain cautious about expanding payrolls amid uncertainty around demand, borrowing costs, and global trade conditions.

Outside health-related roles, the gains were modest. Financial activities added 14,000 jobs, pointing to selective hiring in areas such as insurance, real estate, and financial services, even as parts of the sector face pressure from volatile markets. Construction employment rose by 9,000, likely reflecting ongoing infrastructure projects and pockets of resilience in non-residential building, despite higher financing costs. Trade, transportation, and utilities, along with leisure and hospitality, each added just 4,000 jobs, a subdued showing for sectors that typically benefit from consumer strength.

Losses, however, were more pronounced. Professional and business services shed 57,000 jobs, the steepest decline among all categories. That sector, which includes consulting, legal services, and corporate support functions, is often seen as a bellwether for white-collar confidence. The drop suggests companies are trimming discretionary spending and delaying expansion plans.

Manufacturing employment fell by 8,000, extending a period of weakness tied to soft global demand, elevated borrowing costs, and lingering effects of supply chain realignments. The “other services” category, which includes personal and repair services, lost 13,000 jobs, adding to evidence that parts of the consumer-facing economy are under strain.

In net terms, virtually all job creation came from the services sector, and even there it was narrowly concentrated. Goods-producing industries continued to lag, reinforcing concerns that the U.S. economy lacks the breadth of growth typically associated with a healthy labor market.

Company size data adds another layer to the picture. Mid-sized firms, employing between 50 and 499 workers, accounted for all of January’s net job gains. Small businesses were flat, while large employers cut 18,000 positions. This pattern suggests that big companies, which tend to be more exposed to capital markets, global trade, and shareholder pressure, are actively managing costs and headcount. Small firms, often more sensitive to financing conditions, appear reluctant to hire, likely reflecting tighter credit and uncertain demand. The totals do not add up precisely because of rounding, ADP noted.

Wage growth offered little new comfort as pay for workers who stayed in their jobs rose 4.5%, unchanged from December. While that pace is well below the peaks seen in the immediate post-pandemic period, it remains above levels typically associated with the Federal Reserve’s inflation target. For policymakers, this combination of weak hiring and still-firm wage growth complicates the outlook: the labor market is cooling, but not in a way that clearly alleviates underlying price pressures.

The January ADP report continues a trend that defined much of 2025: a low-hire, low-fire environment. Employers appear unwilling to expand aggressively, yet layoffs remain relatively contained. This stasis suggests companies are waiting for clearer signals on the economic trajectory, including the direction of interest rates, fiscal policy, and global growth.

ADP’s data usually precedes the more closely watched nonfarm payrolls report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which provides a fuller picture of employment, wages, and participation. That release, normally due Friday, has again been delayed by a partial U.S. government shutdown, leaving markets and policymakers without a timely official snapshot of the labor market.

Overall, the latest figures point to an economy entering 2026 with limited momentum. Hiring is narrow, confidence among employers appears subdued, and job growth depends heavily on health care and education. With manufacturing and professional services under pressure and wage growth still elevated, the labor market offers little clarity for policymakers debating whether current conditions warrant patience or a shift toward additional support.

LemFi Taps Australia’s Booming Remittance Market Following AUSTRAC Regulatory Approval

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LemFi, a fintech company focused on low-cost, instant money transfers to Africa and Asia, has expanded its operations to Australia following formal authorization from AUSTRAC, the country’s financial intelligence and regulatory authority.

The approval allows LemFi to operate as an independent remittance dealer in Australia, marking a major step in its global expansion strategy. With this authorization, LemFi can now offer its remittance services directly to customers resident in Australia.

The company says the approval reflects regulatory confidence in its compliance and operational systems, while positioning it to serve Australia’s diverse migrant communities with cost-effective and reliable international payment services.

Commenting on the development, LemFi CEO Ridwan Olalere described the move as a significant milestone in the company’s mission to serve migrant communities worldwide.

He wrote,

“We are thrilled to announce that LemFi has received formal approval from AUSTRAC to operate as an independent remittance dealer in Australia. This isn’t just another market entry; it’s a major milestone in our mission to provide seamless financial services to the world’s migrant communities. Australia is one of the world’s most vital outbound remittance corridors, with over 8.6 million residents born overseas.”

Why Australia Expansion is Significant For LemFi

Australia’s migrant population has expanded rapidly in recent years and now represents 31.5% of the total population, or about 8.6 million people, following record net overseas migration over the past two years. Migrants also play a major role in the country’s economy, contributing an estimated USD $330 billion (AUD $480.5 billion).

Outbound remittances from Australia have also surged. In 2024 alone, USD $38.2 billion (AUD $56.6 billion) was sent overseas, making the country one of the world’s most important remittance corridors. Many of these funds flow into markets where LemFi already has a strong presence. India was the largest recipient of remittances from Australia in 2024, receiving USD $7.3 billion, followed by China at USD $5.35 billion. Other key corridors include Vietnam, the Philippines, Pakistan, Kenya, and Nigeria.

The Significance of AUSTRAC Approval

LemFi executives emphasized that AUSTRAC’s approval underscores the strength of the company’s regulatory and compliance framework. “Receiving AUSTRAC approval reflects the strength of our compliance framework and allows us to support Australia’s diverse migrant communities with secure, transparent, and accessible financial services,” said Rebeca Wignall, Chief Legal Officer at LemFi.

Australia’s growing migrant population continues to drive demand for reliable remittance services. “Australia is a critical remittance corridor, and demand continues to grow alongside migration,” said Mamadou Mareme Diop, VP of Remittance at LemFi. “This approval allows us to bring LemFi’s trusted, customer-first remittance experience to a market where these services are essential to millions of people.”

Building a Global Platform for Migrants

Founded in 2020 by Ridwan Olalere and Rian Cochran, LemFi is building a financial services platform designed specifically for immigrant communities. Beginning with payments and remittances, the platform allows users to open multi-currency accounts and send and receive money globally at low cost.

In 2023, the company raised $33 million to support its expansion into markets including China, India, and Pakistan. LemFi currently serves over 2 million customers across North America and Europe, enabling money transfers to more than 30 countries worldwide.

Australia now joins LemFi’s growing list of regulated markets, alongside the UK, Europe, the United States, and several key remittance corridors across Africa and Asia. The expansion aligns with the company’s broader ambition to create a full financial ecosystem for immigrants, covering remittances, savings, and credit, and tailored to the realities of global mobility.

Ben Horowitz Pushes Back on AI Job-Loss Fears, Says the Future of Work Is Far Less Predictable Than Critics Claim

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Ben Horowitz is unconvinced by the growing chorus of warnings that artificial intelligence is on the verge of wiping out jobs at scale. Instead, the Andreessen Horowitz cofounder argues that the most confident predictions about AI-driven mass unemployment rest on a shaky assumption: that the future of work can be forecast with any real certainty.

Speaking on Tuesday on the Invest Like The Best podcast, Horowitz said the debate around AI and employment has become overly deterministic, with too many commentators treating job losses as an inevitable and linear outcome of technological progress.

“I think people are acting as though it’s very predictable when it’s not at all predictable,” Horowitz said. “Why are you so sure it’s going to happen next? And why are you so sure no jobs are going to be created? I don’t think it’s nearly as predictable as people are saying.”

His comments land at a moment when anxiety over AI’s economic impact is intensifying, even as adoption accelerates across industries. Governments are weighing regulation, companies are racing to integrate generative AI into workflows, and workers are trying to understand whether the technology represents an opportunity or an existential threat.

The debate has sharply divided the tech world. Some of the field’s most prominent voices have issued stark warnings. Geoffrey Hinton, often described as the “Godfather of AI,” has repeatedly cautioned that advanced AI systems could displace large numbers of workers. Similar concerns have been raised by UC Berkeley professor Stuart Russell, University of Louisville computer scientist Roman Yampolskiy, and Anthropic chief executive Dario Amodei, who has said AI could eliminate a significant share of white-collar jobs.

On the other side are executives who see AI less as a job killer and more as a force for reconfiguration. OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman and Nvidia boss Jensen Huang have both argued that while AI will disrupt existing roles, it is more likely to reshape work and create new categories of employment rather than erase work altogether.

Horowitz aligns more closely with the latter camp, but his argument goes beyond optimism about new roles. He frames AI as the latest phase in a much longer historical process, one in which automation has repeatedly transformed economies in ways that were impossible to foresee in advance.

To make his point, Horowitz drew on the most dramatic example of all: agriculture. In the early years of the US economy, he noted, farming accounted for roughly 95% of jobs. Today, those roles have almost entirely disappeared, replaced by work that would have been unrecognizable to earlier generations.

“We’ve been automating things since the agricultural days,” Horowitz said. “Almost all those jobs have been eliminated. And the jobs we have now, the people doing agriculture wouldn’t even consider jobs.”

For Horowitz, that history undercuts the confidence of today’s AI doomsayers. The error, he argues, is assuming that current job categories offer a reliable map of the future. Each major technological shift, from industrial machinery to computers and the internet, destroyed large numbers of existing roles while giving rise to entirely new forms of work that were difficult to imagine beforehand.

“The idea that we could imagine all the jobs that are going to come, sitting here now, that AI is going to enable, I think is low,” he said.

He also questioned the sense of urgency that often accompanies predictions of imminent mass displacement. Modern AI, he argued, did not appear overnight. Many of its core technologies have been under development for more than a decade.

Image recognition breakthroughs date back to around 2012, while advances in natural language processing gathered pace by 2015. Even ChatGPT, which ignited the current wave of public interest, was launched in 2022. Yet, Horowitz asked, where is the wave of job destruction that was supposed to follow?

“We’ve had AI going right — ImageNet was what, 2012 and then natural language stuff was like 2015, and then ChatGPT was 2022,” he said. “Where’s all the job destruction? Why hasn’t it happened yet?”

That skepticism does not mean Horowitz believes AI will leave the labor market untouched. He acknowledged that certain roles are likely to come under pressure, particularly jobs focused on processing or relaying information for others, tasks that AI systems are increasingly capable of performing faster and cheaper.

But he expects those losses to be offset by growing demand in other areas, especially work that leans on creativity, judgment, and the ability to define problems rather than simply execute them.

“I don’t really think that the door is going to close behind you,” Horowitz said. “I think the opportunities tend to multiply when you open up a new way of doing things.”

His view reflects a broader strand of thinking within Silicon Valley that sees AI less as an endpoint and more as a general-purpose tool, one that will alter how work is done rather than eliminate the need for people altogether. Still, the gap between that outlook and the more pessimistic warnings from parts of the AI research community underscores how unsettled the conversation remains.

Horowitz’s message is one of caution against certainty. History, he suggests, offers plenty of evidence that technology disrupts labor markets in messy, uneven, and often surprising ways. What it does not offer is a clear script for how AI’s story will unfold.

Extreme Fear Grips Crypto Market as Bitcoin Plunges to $73K

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Bitcoin plunged sharply this week, sending shockwaves through the cryptocurrency market as fear and uncertainty spiked. The crypto asset dropped below its critical buy zone around $80,000 last week, trading as low as $72,889 on Tuesday.

Over $730 million in leveraged positions were liquidated in just 24 hours, as investors grappled with sustained selling pressure and heightened market uncertainty. Ethereum, Solana, XRP, and other major tokens also saw sharp losses, signaling that the crypto market remains in the grip of extreme fear.

Bitcoin which is trading at $76,445 at the time of this report, is struggling to reclaim the $80,000 level, with price action remaining fragile and rebound attempts failing to gain strong momentum. Analysts note that this indicates the market may be undergoing a broader structural correction rather than a short-term pullback.

The current Bitcoin price marks levels last seen before President Trump’s election night victory in 2016, a period that had historically catalyzed growth in the crypto market due to his campaign support for digital assets. While Bitcoin traded sideways in the mid-$80,000 range between February and March 2025, it surged to an all-time high of $126,080 on October 6, 2025, according to The Block.

Top analyst Axel Adler describes Bitcoin’s recent trajectory as part of a bear cycle that began in October 2025. Matt Hougan, Chief Investment Officer at Bitwise, emphasizes that the flagship coin is in a multi-month bear market, driven by factors such as excess leverage and profit-taking by early investors. “This is not a bull market correction or a dip. It is a full-bore, 2022-style crypto winter set into motion by excess leverage and widespread profit-taking,” Hougan said.

The selloff has impacted the wider crypto market. Ethereum fell over 9% to below $2,200, Solana dropped more than 7% to under $100, and XRP declined 6.6% to approximately $1.52. Canton experienced the steepest losses among the top 25 tokens by market capitalization, falling over 10% to $0.17. Crypto-related equities also mirrored the downturn, with Coinbase down over 6% and the bitcoin-focused Strategy down more than 8%.

Contributing factors to the market decline include macroeconomic uncertainty amid the risk of a U.S. government shutdown and broader equity market weakness, with the Nasdaq Composite falling 2.2%. Geopolitical developments may also add to volatility, as tensions between the U.S. and Iran remain unresolved despite preparations for talks in Turkey. Analysts warn that any military escalation in the Middle East could drive oil prices higher and push cryptocurrency prices lower, given Bitcoin’s historical sensitivity to geopolitical risk.

On the positive side, some analysts view the current extreme market fear as a potential indicator for a future rebound. The Crypto Fear and Greed Index has plunged to 12, a level associated historically with market bottoms and subsequent recoveries. Previous extreme fear readings, such as the one preceding Bitcoin’s push toward $100,000, suggest that a stabilization or rally could follow the current capitulation.

Outlook

Bitcoin and the broader crypto market remain under pressure, with technical indicators signaling that volatility may persist in the near term. Investors are closely watching the $70,000 to $75,000 support zone, while macroeconomic and geopolitical developments could further influence market direction.

While short-term weakness may continue, historically, periods of extreme fear have preceded recoveries, suggesting that opportunities may exist for strategic buyers once broader market sentiment begins to normalize.

Intersection of Banks, Stablecoins and Politics in the United States 

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The intersection of banks, stablecoins, and politics in the U.S. has created a contentious battleground, particularly around stablecoin yields and broader cryptocurrency regulation.

Stablecoins are digital assets pegged to stable fiat currencies like the USD, designed for payments, trading, and value storage without the volatility of other cryptocurrencies.

Their rapid growth—surpassing $200 billion in market cap by early 2026—has positioned them as a direct competitor to traditional banking deposits. The core conflict stems from the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act, signed into law in July 2025, which established a federal framework for stablecoins but prohibited issuers from directly paying interest or yields to holders.

This was intended to prevent stablecoins from blurring lines with banking activities and to maintain separation between commerce and finance. However, the law left room for third-party platforms or “rewards” programs to offer yields indirectly, often through staking or other mechanisms, making stablecoins attractive alternatives to low-yield bank accounts.

Banks, which earn significant profits from the spread between what they pay depositors often near 0% and what they earn on reserves around 3-4% at the Fed, view this as an existential threat, potentially leading to a “deposit flight” that could erode their margins and lending capacity.

Politically, this has escalated into intense lobbying. Traditional banks and their allies in Congress, including figures on the Senate Banking Committee, argue that allowing stablecoin yields creates regulatory loopholes, enabling crypto firms to perform bank-like functions without equivalent oversight or capital requirements.

They frame it as a risk to financial stability, community banks, and the broader economy, pushing for amendments to close these gaps. On the other side, crypto advocates, including firms like Coinbase and Galaxy Digital CEO Mike Novogratz, accuse banks of protectionism to safeguard their oligopolistic profits at the expense of innovation and consumer benefits.

They point out that stablecoins could democratize access to yields, foster competition, and integrate crypto into mainstream finance, but entrenched interests are blocking this. This clash has stalled progress on the broader CLARITY Act, a bipartisan bill aimed at clarifying crypto market structure, including custody, trading, and oversight between agencies like the SEC and CFTC.

Despite support from both parties and the Trump administration’s pro-crypto stance, negotiations have dragged on due to the stablecoin yield debate, with Senate delays and last-minute lobbying derailing votes.

Efforts like Coinbase’s meetings with bank CEOs at Davos in January 2026 signal attempts at compromise, but public discourse on platforms like X highlights the impasse: crypto enthusiasts see it as banks undermining innovation, while some analysts warn of systemic risks if stablecoins bypass banking safeguards.

Ultimately, this political gridlock comes at the expense of regulatory clarity, which could accelerate U.S. leadership in digital finance amid global competition from places like Europe and China.

Without resolution, the U.S. risks lagging in tokenized assets and efficient payment systems, as the fight prioritizes incumbent protections over broader progress.

The ongoing collision between banks, stablecoins, and politics in the U.S. — particularly around the GENIUS Act (signed July 2025) and the stalled CLARITY Act — carries profound implications for financial stability, innovation, consumer access, and global competitiveness as of February 2026.

The GENIUS Act established a federal framework for payment stablecoins, restricting issuance to regulated entities with strict reserve requirements; 100% backing by high-quality liquid assets like Treasuries, audits, AML compliance, and a direct ban on issuers paying interest or yield to holders.

This was largely a win for banks, preventing stablecoins from directly competing as interest-bearing deposit alternatives and protecting their core business model: earning spreads on low- or zero-interest deposits while holding reserves at the Fed.

However, the loophole allowing indirect “rewards” via staking, liquidity provision, or third-party programs on platforms like Coinbase has become a flashpoint. Banks, led by the American Bankers Association (ABA) and executives like Bank of America’s Brian Moynihan, warn of massive deposit flight—potentially trillions of dollars shifting to yield-bearing stablecoin options.

This could: Raise banks’ funding costs forcing higher deposit rates or reliance on costlier sources like brokered deposits. Reduce lending capacity, especially for community banks funding local mortgages and small businesses.

Disrupt credit creation and increase borrowing costs economy-wide. Research including Fed analyses and even some crypto-funded studies supports this risk: yield-bearing stablecoins could drain $65 billion to $1.26 trillion from bank lending, accelerating “deposit substitution” and exposing banks to liquidity mismatches.

Banks are aggressively lobbying to close these gaps in the CLARITY Act, framing it as a financial stability imperative rather than protectionism. The GENIUS Act provided much-needed legitimacy and clarity, boosting adoption by embedding stablecoins in a regulated environment (market cap already over $200 billion).

It accelerated integration with traditional finance, with compliant issuers gaining credibility and attracting institutional use cases like tokenized assets and payments. Yet the yield ban limits consumer appeal—stablecoins remain low-yield compared to alternatives—pushing innovation toward workarounds that risk regulatory crackdowns.

Crypto firms argue these restrictions stifle competition, consumer benefits, and U.S. leadership in digital finance. A stricter ban could:Slow retail adoption and migration from low-yield bank accounts. Drive activity offshore or to unregulated/DeFi channels. Hinder platforms’ revenue models reliant on rewards.

The industry sees this as incumbents blocking progress, but some view it as necessary guardrails to avoid systemic risks like blockchain-enabled bank runs. The yield debate has derailed the CLARITY Act (Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025), which aims to define SEC vs. CFTC oversight, custody rules, and market structure for broader crypto assets including tokenized securities and DeFi.

Despite House passage in 2025, bipartisan Senate progress stalled amid lobbying, committee delays, and failed White House compromises. Optimists predict passage by April 2026 under pro-crypto momentum, but Citi analysts and others warn delays could extend beyond midterms.

This impasse means: Lingering uncertainty hampers investment and innovation. The U.S. risks lagging behind clearer regimes (e.g., EU’s MiCA, Hong Kong’s licensing with yield allowances), where stablecoins integrate faster into payments and tokenization.

Unchecked yield-bearing stablecoins could trigger rapid deposit outflows during stress, but over-regulation might push activity underground or offshore, creating hidden fragilities. Prioritizing bank safeguards may preserve lending channels but slow tokenized finance, efficient payments, and DeFi growth.

Holders miss passive yields; everyday users gain safer stablecoins but lose competitive options. Regulated stablecoins could reinforce USD hegemony in digital payments—if resolved favorably—amid rising global alternatives.

This fight prioritizes short-term incumbent protections over comprehensive progress, stalling regulatory clarity that could accelerate U.S. digital finance leadership. Resolution likely via compromise on rewards is needed to balance stability with innovation; otherwise, the U.S. may cede ground in the tokenized economy while banks defend margins at the cost of broader advancement.