What the November JOLTS report showed
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics release for November 2025, job openings fell to 7.146 million after October was revised down to 7.449 million. Hires also slipped to 5.115 million, while total separations were little changed at 5.080 million. Quits, which economists often watch as a measure of worker confidence, edged up to 3.161 million. The broader takeaway from the report was not sudden labor-market stress. Instead, it was continued cooling. The BLS said nonfarm job openings, hires, and total separations showed little or no change over the month, a description that fits a market slowing in place rather than one breaking down. The official Economics Daily summary from BLS also showed where the pullback was concentrated. Openings declined in accommodation and food services, transportation, warehousing and utilities, and wholesale trade. Construction, by contrast, posted an increase. That split suggests the weakness was real, but not universal. In plain terms, businesses were still looking for workers, just not with the urgency seen earlier in the cycle. Openings remained above pre-pandemic norms in some corners of the economy, yet the market no longer looked like the rapid-fire hiring environment that defined 2021 and parts of 2022.Why this number matters more than it might look
What it says about the labor market heading into 2026
The November report arrived at a time when investors and policymakers were trying to judge whether the economy could keep growing without a stronger hiring engine. Growth had held up better than many analysts expected, but the labor market had been losing some of its dynamism. Fewer openings, slower hiring, and modest quit rates all pointed in the same direction. For businesses, that may not be bad news across the board. A cooler hiring market can reduce recruiting costs, shorten vacancy periods, and ease wage competition. For workers, though, especially those hoping to use a tight market to move up quickly, the environment has become less favorable. There is also an important distinction between a labor market that is weak and one that is simply less heated. The JOLTS report did not show a surge in layoffs. That matters. A sharp rise in layoffs would signal employers are actively cutting back. What November showed instead was restraint. Firms appeared more hesitant to add people than to let them go. That leaves the labor market in an awkward middle ground. It is not flashing the kind of alarm that usually precedes a recession, but it is also not delivering the kind of broad hiring strength that makes job hunting easier. For many Americans, that means the market may feel softer than headline unemployment alone would suggest. The BLS data are also subject to revision, which means the exact shape of late 2025 labor demand could still change in later updates. But as the November report was first published, the trend was clear enough: employers closed out the year with fewer openings, slower hiring, and a labor market that looked cooler, more selective, and harder to navigate than it had a year earlier.
Vince Coyner is a serial entrepreneur with an MBA from Florida State. Business, finance and entrepreneurship have never been far from his mind, from starting a financial education program for middle and high school students twenty years ago to writing about American business titans more recently. Beyond business he writes about politics, culture and history.


