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Analysis

BLS Commissioner removed after weak jobs report: What it means for the Dollar

What just happened?

On August 6, 2025, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) saw a sudden leadership change. Commissioner Erika McEntarfer was removed following a weaker-than-expected July jobs report, which showed just 73,000 jobs added. May and June figures were also revised lower by a combined 258,000.

A new commissioner is expected to be appointed within days. While the reasons behind the decision weren’t fully detailed, the timing has sparked debate about the independence of economic data agencies — especially during an election cycle.

Why markets are paying attention

The BLS is one of the most important sources of economic data in the world. Investors, central banks, and institutions rely on its reports to shape decisions.

When leadership changes occur immediately after major data releases, it can raise questions — not just about the numbers, but about the decision-making behind them. That’s why traders and economists are watching this development closely.

This also comes as the White House prepares to nominate a new Federal Reserve board member — potentially with long-term implications for monetary policy.

Impact on the Dollar (DXY)

The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the dollar against a basket of currencies, has been under pressure throughout 2025. It’s down nearly 10% from earlier highs and recently touched 96.6.

A mix of factors is driving this move:

  • Expectations of rate cuts later this year.
  • Concerns over rising fiscal deficits.
  • Uncertainty around institutional stability.

The BLS leadership change has only added to that uncertainty, especially as investors try to gauge how objective future economic reports will remain.

DXY technical breakdown

Looking at the chart, DXY recently rejected cleanly off the 100.00 resistance zone. It then formed a descending channel — a classic bear flag pattern.

This week, price broke below the lower edge of that flag near 98.60. That breakdown adds technical weight to the bearish macro outlook.

Key levels traders are watching

The next critical support is 97.60. If that fails to hold, the DXY could slide toward 96.00 or even 91.00 over the coming months — areas not seen since the pre-tightening era.

However, if the index climbs back above 99.00, that would invalidate the current bearish setup and suggest a shift in sentiment.

Takeaway

The removal of the BLS commissioner after a disappointing jobs report has put fresh pressure on the US dollar. With institutional trust now part of the conversation, the DXY is weakening both technically and fundamentally.

Traders should watch the 97.60 level closely. A clean break could signal the start of a deeper leg lower in the dollar trend.

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