But markets soon corrected, ending the month with gains.

Still, concerns remain about the state of the labor market: “Recent softness, coupled with the recent substantial negative benchmark revisions subtracting more than 800k jobs in payrolls from April 2023 to March of this year, underscores downside risks for the economy,” said Mark Hamrick, senior economic analyst at Bankrate, in a note Tuesday.

Friday’s jobs report is arguably the most important piece of economic data that central bank officials will have to parse before their monetary policy meeting on September 17-18. A weak headline number coupled with a higher unemployment rate could push the Fed to roll out a jumbo, half-point rate cut to put the economy back on track. A softer number would mean a quarter-point hike. Either way, consumers and businesses are looking forward to any breathing room that lower interest rates will bring, in the form of less punishing loan rates, mortgage rates and other ways to borrow money.

Oil also dropped Tuesday as concerns rose about softening global demand. Oil cartel OPEC is expected to increase output next month despite outages in Libya. International benchmark Brent fell to $73.70 a barrel and US benchmark West Texas Intermediate closed at just above $70 a barrel.