WSJ What’s News - Stocks Slide After Weak February Jobs Report
Episode Date: March 6, 2026P.M. Edition for Mar. 6. The Labor Department said today that the U.S. lost 92,000 jobs in February—a greater drop than economists expected. WSJ economics reporter Justin Lahart discusses the sector...s affected, and what this report means for the Federal Reserve. Plus, President Trump calls for “unconditional surrender” in Iran. And WSJ markets reporter Hannah Erin Lang says U.S. stocks dropped after the weak employment report, while oil prices continued their rise, notching their biggest weekly gain on record. Alex Ossola hosts. Sign up for the WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In an unexpected downturn, the U.S. lost 92,000 jobs in February.
Plus, President Trump's new pick to head the Department of Homeland Security is a signal
that the president doesn't plan to back off his signature immigration tactics.
I think that Mullen is 100% on board with Trump's immigration policies and deportation efforts.
What will be interesting to see is whether his relationships on Capitol Hill might make his job a little bit easier.
And Trump calls for Iran's, quote, unconnuching.
additional surrender. It's Friday, March 6th. I'm Alex O'SAleft for the Wall Street Journal.
This is the PM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories that move the
world today. The Labor Department today reported that the U.S. lost 92,000 jobs in February.
It's a significant downturn from January's gain of 126,000 jobs, and it's also worse than the
50,000 jobs the economy was expected to add last month.
And one more number, the unemployment rate rose slightly to 4.4%.
For more on these numbers, I'm joined now by WSJ economics reporter, Justin Layhart.
Justin, healthcare jobs in particular have propped up the labor market for some time now.
In February, the health care and social assistance sector lost more than 18,000 jobs.
What happened there?
Yeah, a couple of things happened.
There was a strike at Kaiser Permanente, and that did knock several thousand.
jobs off of health care employment. Also, there was a really outsized gain in health care in January.
So some of this was a give back to that. And some people think that the data may just be a little
more volatile than it used to be. But, you know, overall, this is a very weak report.
Construction, shedding jobs, manufacturing, shedding jobs, information shedding jobs, leisure and
hospitality shipping. I mean, it was really, you know, just not a good report at all.
The unemployment rate caught my eye because that's kind of been creeping up steadily over the past few years.
What does that tell us about the strength of the labor market?
Yeah, I mean, so the unemployment rate went up to 4.4%. That's still relatively low.
One thing that's going on here is that we don't really have like a strong sense of how many jobs the economy needs to
add each month to keep unemployment rate steady anymore. And that's because with immigration
restrictions, the population just isn't growing like it used to, especially the working age population.
So you may just not need to create as many jobs to keep up with population growth as we did before.
The Fed has to watch the jobs market and also take into account what happens with inflation.
Now, energy prices are rising with the Middle East conflict. So if we see this job market weakening,
what does that mean for the Fed's next meeting later this month?
This month's Fed meeting, you wouldn't really expect to see any action on interest rates.
They like to see more than one report to give them a direction of where things are going, right?
But it does open up the possibility of more rate cuts this year.
That was WSJ economics reporter, Justin Layhart.
Thanks, Justin.
Thanks.
In news today about the war in the Middle East, President Trump is calling for Iran's unconditional surrender and, quote,
acceptable leadership in the country. He said the U.S. and allies would then work to strengthen
Iran's economy. A State Department spokesman said today that nearly 24,000 Americans have returned
to the U.S. from the Middle East since the war with Iran began. But getting them out hasn't been
easy. We're exclusively reporting that some 1,000 people who were in Dubai for a Google corporate
sales extravaganza got stuck there. Google has since arranged for many to leave. The company says
it's focused on the safety of its employees in the region.
Meanwhile, U.S. military investigators think American forces were likely responsible for a strike that killed dozens of children at a girls' elementary school in Iran.
That's according to a U.S. official.
A Wall Street Journal analysis found that the school is located on the edge of a compound linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Defense Secretary Pete Hexeth said this week that the U.S. is investigating the strike.
The U.S. hasn't publicly acknowledged that its forces struck the compound.
And from Iran to Cuba. President Trump told CNN today that he believes the Cuban government, quote, is going to fall pretty soon. It's his second comment in two days suggesting he anticipates a near-term change to the country's government. And the journal has learned that a federal prosecutor in Florida is looking to build criminal cases against leaders of Cuba's government and Communist Party. The U.S. attorney in Miami has created a working group across several government agencies to gather evidence for potential crimes related to drugs, immigration, and other violations.
The Trump administration used criminal charges as a pretext for the ouster of Venezuelan leader Nicholas Maduro.
A Justice Department spokesman said that federal prosecutors' work include efforts to combat transnational crime.
A volatile week in trading closed out today with another down day for stocks and a big jump in the price of oil.
The NASDAQ led the day's losses in the major indexes closing down 1.6%.
Wall Street Journal Markets reporter Hannah Aaron Lang says investors are worried about oil supply disruption.
from the Middle East War and the U.S. economy.
So stocks fell again today, and one of the big reasons had to do with oil prices.
Oil prices continued the relentless rise amid the widening military conflict in the Middle East,
and they searched above $90 after logging their biggest weekly gain on record.
This has to do with the fact that the war with Iran has forced a de facto closure of the Strait of Formuz,
which is a key shipping route for global energy.
And then the jobs report was a lot worse than economist's economy.
expected. The U.S. economy lost 92,000 jobs. That's stirring up these fears of stagflation, which is a
scenario in which economic growth stalls, but inflation continues to rise, which would be pretty
bad news for investors. And for the week, the Dow fell 3 percent, its worst showing since April
2025. The S&P slid 2 percent, and the NASDAQ lost 1.2 percent this week.
Coming up, the government's plan for tariff refunds. That's after the
break.
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Yesterday, President Trump announced that he plans to nominate Senator Mark Wayne Mullen
of Oklahoma as leader of the Department of Homeland Security.
In choosing Mullen, the president selected someone as pugnacious as former Secretary Kristy Knoem
and signaled he doesn't plan to back off on immigration.
Lindsay Wise covers Congress for the journal and is here to tell us more about Mullen,
a former MMA fighter known for being a Trump whisperer.
Lindsay, what do we know about Mullen? What does he like? He was first elected to the House in 2012 and the Senate in 2022. So he's been around Washington for a while.
Yeah, his profile has really risen in the last couple of years. As he got very close with Trump, he talks to him a lot. He says they're very good friends. And I think he has been a fierce defender of all of Trump's policies from national security, the Iran war, and also border security.
policies and portations. He's been on TV a lot defending them, but also on Capitol Hill,
he has close to leadership in both chambers, and he often ends up sort of in the middle of
negotiations over everything from tax policy to spending bills, trying to kind of bring folks
together. And that's made him, I think, very valuable to Trump. What kind of impression does he
leave around the Hill? We often see, as members of the press corps, Mark Wayne Mullen, walking around
the halls of Congress bouncing a bouncy ball in the halls and he wears his cowboy hat on the floor,
which is unusual. There's a question about whether that violates the dress code. But he also
is sort of seen as a kind of man of action. And you mentioned he was a former MMA fighter.
He also was on the floor of the house on January 6th, helped barricade it against the protesters.
So, you know, he's seen as a fighter. And some of his friends on Capitol Hill told me that's why they
think that Trump picked him.
And he does love to talk to the media.
Right.
So Noam was pushed out after this big criticism of how DHS handled the administration's
immigration crackdown.
Mullen has defended ICE agents and pushed back against many changes Democrats want to see
in return for restoring funds to DHS.
As he said on CNBC last month.
If they're wanting to talk about equipment that they, that the ICE agents use, okay, but if
they're wanting to make it harder for ICE agents to enforce the needs.
nation laws, which, by the way, Congress passed and they're simply enforcing, we're not,
we're not going to go down that path. We want the ICE agents to enforce the nation's laws. Why?
Because we're a nation that enforces laws and we don't want to be a lawless nation.
What else do we know about where Mullen stands on the administration's immigration policy?
I think the Mullen is 100 percent on board with Trump's immigration policies and deportation
efforts. What will be interesting to see is whether his relationships on Capitol Hill might
make his job a little bit easier.
He does need Senate confirmation,
but he doesn't technically need Democrats
to help confirm him.
That was WSTA reporter, Lindsay Wise.
Thanks, Lindsay. Thank you.
Elsewhere in Washington, Texas representative
Tony Gonzalez said he wouldn't
seek re-election. The announcement late
yesterday came shortly after top
Republican House leaders asked him to drop
his re-election bid, and a day
after he admitted to having an affair with an
aide who later killed herself.
U.S. Customs and Border
Protection said today that a system for tariff refunds will be operational in 45 days.
A trade court ruling earlier this week required the agency to begin refunding tariff payments
collected under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Tariffs at the Supreme Court
struck down last month. CBP has collected about $166 billion worth of those payments as of Wednesday.
In media news, the Journal has learned that a group of states is preparing to challenge Next
stars planned $6.2 billion acquisition of rival broadcaster Tegna. The states would file their
antitrust suit if a federal regulator clears the deal. President Trump has said he supports the merger.
And across the pond, German publisher Axel Springer struck a deal to buy Britain's daily
telegraph newspaper for about $770 million, beating out a rival bid from the daily mail.
The Telegraph, a favorite read among members of the UK Conservative Party, tends to target wealthier readers.
In the U.S., Axel Springer's holdings include Politico and Business Insider.
And that's what's news for this week.
Tomorrow, you can look out for our weekly markets wrap up, What's News and Markets?
The episode we had planned for last Sunday shifted because of the attacks on Iran.
So now this Sunday, we'll have an episode of our USA 250 series about the history and future of retirement in the U.S.
That's in What's New Sunday.
And we'll be back with our regular show on Monday morning.
Today's show was produced by Pierre Biennamee and Alexis Moore, with supervising
producer Tali Arbel. Michael LaValle wrote our theme music. Isha Al-Muslim is our development producer.
Chris Sinsley is our deputy editor, and Falana Patterson is the Wall Street Journal's head of news audio.
I'm Alex Osala. Have a great weekend, and thanks for listening.
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