U.S. manufacturing payrolls slipped back into contraction territory in February 2026, with the sector losing 12,000 jobs after a modest gain at the start of the year. The latest data, updated on 6 March 2026, show that the previous month’s increase of 5,000 positions in January has reversed, underscoring ongoing volatility in factory employment.
The shift from a positive reading of 5,000 in January to a decline of 12,000 in February suggests renewed pressure on manufacturers, even as broader labor market indicators in the U.S. have remained relatively resilient. While no sector-specific drivers were detailed in the release, the negative print highlights that manufacturing continues to face headwinds and remains a potential weak spot within the overall employment landscape.
With the February downturn following only a brief uptick in January, market participants and policymakers are likely to watch upcoming releases closely for signs of whether this marks the beginning of a more prolonged soft patch in factory hiring or a temporary setback in an otherwise uneven recovery path for U.S. manufacturing jobs.