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Afford Anything | Make Smart Money Choices

BONUS: The Economy Added 115,000 Jobs. Consumer Confidence Just Hit a 74-Year Low. Let’s Unpack This.

Afford Anything | Make Smart Money Choices

Paula Pant | Cumulus Podcast Network

Entrepreneurship, Investing, Business

4.73.6K Ratings

🗓️ 11 May 2026

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The US economy added 115,000 jobs in April -- and the numbers look solid on the surface. But dig a little deeper and you'll find a tech sector in freefall, a housing market frozen in place, and consumer sentiment that hit a 74-year low. This bonus episode breaks down the May jobs report, which came out a week late because the Bureau of Labor Statistics pushed its release from the first Friday to the second Friday of the month. The job gains were concentrated in healthcare, transportation, warehousing, and retail. Healthcare alone added 37,000 jobs, driven largely by nursing facilities and home health care services for an aging population. Retail gains clustered in discount stores and warehouse clubs - not department stores or electronics retailers - which tells you consumers are spending more carefully. Tech got hit hard. The information sector lost another 13,000 jobs in April and is now down 342,000 jobs - about 11 percent - from its November 2022 peak. People working part-time because they can't find full-time work jumped by 445,000 in a single month. Consumer sentiment is at its lowest point in 74 years of University of Michigan tracking - worse than 2008, worse than the inflation of the 1970s. One reason: gas prices. There's a psychological outsized effect to standing at a pump watching the total climb every week, versus an invisible mortgage adjustment buried in a monthly bank statement. The housing market didn't get its usual spring bounce. Existing home sales ticked up just 0.2 percent between March and April. Inventory rose 5.8 percent, but at 4.4 months of supply, the market still needs roughly 30 percent more inventory to reach balance. Median sale price sits at $417,700, up less than 1 percent year over year. Homes are averaging 32 days on market - giving buyers more negotiating leverage than they've had in years. Timestamps: (00:00) April jobs report: 115,000 new jobs, but tech takes a hit (02:38) Jobs data matters more than the stock market (03:14) Where jobs grew: healthcare, transportation,warehousing, retail (05:14) Consumer sentiment hits 74-year low (07:46) Why gas prices hurt more than other costs (11:20) Tech sector down 342,000 jobs from 2022 peak (11:52) Part-time workers up 445,000 in a single month (13:38) Housing market: no spring rebound (15:16) Inventory up, but still 30 percent below a balanced market (16:16) Housing market frozen - not crashing, not skyrocketing (17:13) Golden handcuffs: why sellers aren't selling (18:23) Why buyers have more negotiating power now Enroll in our course, "Your First Rental Property" while the doors are open! https://affordanything.com/enroll Share this episode with a friend, colleagues, and your postal person: https://affordanything.com/firstfridaymay2026 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

The U.S. added 115,000 new jobs in April, totally exceeding expectations, but there was one

0:08.7

industry in particular, information technology, basically the tech sector, that performed terribly.

0:15.5

The job growth was concentrated in a couple of areas, healthcare, transportation, warehousing,

0:20.2

retail, while tech is having

0:22.4

a bloodbath. We're going to discuss that. We're also going to talk about the stock market,

0:26.3

the housing market, and more. Welcome to the first Monday after the second Friday episode

0:32.6

of the Afford Anything podcast. Now, normally, if you're a long-time listener, you know that on the first Friday of every

0:39.8

month, we do an episode that's a macroeconomic update.

0:43.2

We talk about what's happening in the economy.

0:45.1

And the reason we do it on the first Friday is because that's the day that the Bureau

0:49.3

of Labor Statistics, the BLS, puts out its jobs report.

0:53.3

While this past first Friday, Friday May 1st, the BLS did puts out its jobs report. While this past first Friday, Friday May

0:55.6

1st, the BLS did not put out its report, as it typically does, instead the BLS delayed until

1:01.2

the second Friday. And so, following their lead, our economic update is now on the first

1:06.9

Monday after the second Friday. This is a short bonus episode, which we are releasing

1:13.0

in addition to our normal Tuesday and Thursday episodes. So this is going to be a three-episode

1:17.3

week. It's short. It's ad-free, but I do have one announcement, and that is that we have

1:23.2

opened the doors today to our course on rental property investing. It's called your first

1:28.9

rental property. It is a 10-week guided course on how to invest in rental properties, whether you

1:35.4

want to house hack into a primary residence and offset some of your out-of-pocket costs by virtue

1:40.8

of monetizing your own primary residence, we've got material for that.

1:45.4

Or if you live in a high cost living area and you want to buy a rental property out of state

...

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