At 8:30 a.m. Friday morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics released one of the most surprising employment statistics of the past year. The U.S. economy added 178,000 jobs in March, and the unemployment rate fell to 4.3%.
The numbers were especially strong compared to the Wall Street consensus, which called for nonfarm payrolls of about 57,000. This was the largest monthly increase since the end of 2024 and exceeded all expectations in a recent Bloomberg survey.
However, there was a slight problem. No one on Wall Street can really do anything about it.
why is this important: Strengthening the workforce typically pushes interest rate cut expectations further, which could weigh on risk assets across stocks and cryptocurrencies. With traditional markets closed, Bitcoin became the only major market whose macro shock could start to be priced in ahead of Monday.
The New York Stock Exchange, Nasdaq and bond markets were closed for Good Friday, blocking all traditional channels through which such surprise data would normally be absorbed and prices changed.
The timing couldn’t have been better for the calendar’s most market-sensitive financial newspaper.
That’s why what follows will be a rare and instructive moment. That is, forcing us to experiment with what price discovery looks like when all the normal machinery is offline.
February was a disaster. The economic loss for the month was 92,000 people, nearly twice as much as expected, marking the fourth monthly job loss in nine months. This fix made the damage even worse. The figure for December was revised downward by 65,000 people, from +48,000 to -17,000, and the figure for January was revised downward by an additional 4,000 people.
Heading into Friday, even the most optimistic forecasters weren’t expecting a rebound of this magnitude.
Much of March’s gains came from healthcare. The sector added 76,000 jobs in March, boosting overall employment growth, although a strike among health care workers reduced salaries in February. Construction, transportation and warehousing positions were also added.
While the recovery itself was real, it is important to note that much of the growth was mechanical, a catch-up from previous turmoil rather than evidence of a sudden recovery in the economy.
Still, the 178,000 jobs versus the expected 57,000 is not a rounding error. The impact on Fed policy was immediate and precise. If the numbers are positive, crypto prices will fall as interest rate expectations rise.
Strong labor data will limit the Fed’s room to cut interest rates, and tight financial conditions will spread to all risk assets. So the question here was not whether markets would react, but specifically which markets still had room to react.
Bitcoin becomes a market when NYSE goes dark
At the time the March report was released at 8:30 a.m. ET, the only major financial market still trading was Bitcoin, with the New York Stock Exchange closed and sentiment at extreme fear levels. The Cryptocurrency Fear and Greed Index hit 9 out of 100 on April 3rd, a low enough number to no longer indicate panic, but bordering on weary resignation. Bitcoin hit $66,300 in the morning, and traders appear to be keeping an eye on incoming data.
And once that number was reached, Bitcoin went nowhere.
The employment statistics themselves were neither bullish nor bearish. It was complex, but Bitcoin reflected that complexity more faithfully in its flatness than in its sudden rises and falls.
Consider what lies beneath the surface of your report. The number of long-term unemployed was 1.8 million, an increase of 322,000 over the year. Federal government employment continued to decline under relentless retrenchment. The ongoing war with Iran still threatens to strain the delicate labor market, and advances in AI that could lead to mass layoffs add further uncertainty.
As Moody’s Chief Credit Officer Atsi Sheth pointed out in the 2026 benchmark, the job market is expected to weaken, but the unemployment rate will not rise enough to push the economy into recession.
There is one more complicating issue. The same announcement that brought in 178,000 jobs also revised down December’s figure by 65,000, and January’s figure by 4,000, eliminating nearly 70,000 jobs that the market had already priced in.
This may become a pattern. The BLS has revised down its numbers in recent months with sufficient consistency that the March numbers come with a built-in warning. That means the numbers could be much less impressive when the April report arrives.
Interest rates on US Treasuries, the dollar, and the Federal Reserve were all fixed at $178,000. If that number is revised to 130,000 next month, all those reactions will have been adjusted to incorrect data.
The Fed has no chair, the markets have no floor, and Mondays have no script.
Chairman Jerome Powell said the labor market was in a “zero-employment growth equilibrium” in March, with a sense of downside risk.
He said this before the report came out. With 178,000 jobs now on the ledger, the Fed’s calculations, while not dramatic, are a clear shift toward keeping interest rates steady for longer. With Chairman Powell’s term ending on May 15 and a successor yet to be named, the Fed will have to weather one of the most important data weeks of 2026 without clear leadership.
In this vacuum, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose about 4 basis points to 4.35%, and the dollar edged higher, all in line with the market’s view that further rate cuts are on the way. These were the first obvious reactions not from the institutions that usually set the tone, but from the open edges of the financial system.
Bitcoin will be priced at this number alone for almost three full days until stock trading resumes on April 6th.
When the opening bell rings on Monday morning, stocks will be looking to absorb not only the jobs report that surprised all forecasters, but also any developments that unfold over the Easter weekend in a geopolitical environment where the Iran conflict remains deep and fragile. The ongoing conflict with Iran is simultaneously reshaping oil prices and the dollar.
Bitcoin’s stalled movement means the market is holding positions, recognizing that the verdict rendered now may need to be completely revised by Monday.
The real judgment on the March jobs report will come when the institutions that usually lead this debate are finally allowed back into the room. Until then, this figure is for the bond market, the foreign exchange desk, and the only financial market that does not observe public holidays.
The only clock that is still ticking these past three days is Bitcoin. The question is whether to keep accurate time.
(Tag translation) Bitcoin

