Nonfarm Payrolls are forecast to increase by 62K in April, while the Unemployment Rate is expected to remain unchanged at 4.3%. The USD could face elevated volatility ahead of the weekend.
The United States Bureau of Labor Statistics is set to release the April Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report on Friday at 12:30 GMT, with markets closely watching the data for clues on the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate path later this year.

Economists expect the US economy to add 62K jobs in April, a sharp slowdown from March’s stronger-than-expected 178K gain. The Unemployment Rate is forecast to remain steady at 4.3%, while annual wage growth, measured by Average Hourly Earnings, is seen accelerating to 3.8% from 3.5%.
Analysts at TD Securities expect signs of stabilization in the labor market after several volatile months. They forecast payroll growth of around 80K, driven mainly by hiring in healthcare and leisure & hospitality, while government employment may decline slightly. They also expect monthly wage growth to stay modest at 0.2%.
Additional labor indicators released earlier this week painted a mixed picture. ADP reported that private-sector employment rose by 109K in April, improving from March’s revised 61K increase. Meanwhile, the Employment Index in the Institute for Supply Management Services PMI climbed to 48 from 45.2, signaling that service-sector hiring is still contracting, though at a slower pace.
What impact will the US March Nonfarm Payrolls have on EUR/USD?
EUR/USD is likely to remain highly sensitive to the upcoming US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report, as investors reassess the outlook for the Federal Reserve and the broader direction of the US Dollar.
Despite the Fed’s relatively hawkish April meeting, the USD has struggled to gain traction amid improving global risk sentiment and easing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. Comments from Fed Chair Jerome Powell reinforced a data-dependent approach, while Austan Goolsbee acknowledged that labor market conditions have softened, even if they remain broadly stable.
Markets currently expect the Fed to keep rates unchanged through the end of 2026, though traders still see some probability of either a rate hike or cut depending on incoming data. A weak NFP reading — particularly below 30K alongside a higher Unemployment Rate — could strengthen expectations for rate cuts later this year. In that scenario, the USD may weaken further, allowing EUR/USD to extend gains.

On the other hand, a stronger-than-expected payrolls figure could reduce expectations for monetary easing and help the USD stabilize. This would likely cap EUR/USD upside, although a sustained dollar rally may remain limited if risk appetite stays strong heading into the weekend.
From a technical perspective, FXStreet analyst Eren Sengezer notes that EUR/USD maintains a bullish near-term bias. The pair continues to trade above its 100-day and 200-day Simple Moving Averages, while the Relative Strength Index trends toward bullish territory.

Key resistance is seen around 1.1800–1.1810, followed by 1.1900–1.1910 and the psychological 1.2000 level. On the downside, major support stands in the 1.1710–1.1680 zone, with further downside targets at 1.1650 and 1.1560 if selling pressure intensifies.
Leave a comment