💥 HBAR price nears breakout as inverse head and shoulders pattern forms
HBAR price is consolidating below key resistance as an inverse head and shoulders pattern develops, signaling a potential bullish breakout if the neckline resistance is cleared with volume.
HBAR ($HBAR ) price action is showing increasingly constructive behavior as the market builds a classic bullish reversal structure on the higher timeframes. After an extended corrective phase, price has stabilized and begun forming an inverse head and shoulders pattern, a formation often associated with trend reversals when confirmed
For Better or Worse, Health Care Is America's Employment Engine
For Better or Worse, Health Care Is America’s Employment Engine
_The health care workforce is growing steadily as the American population ages. _
Raquel Natalicchio / Houston Chronicle via Getty Images
Diccon Hyatt
Sat, February 14, 2026 at 4:07 AM GMT+9 1 min read
Key Takeaways
If you want to picture a typical American worker, forget the overalls and hardhat, and think scrubs and a stethoscope.
As of January, more than 18 million people worked in health care, compared to 12 million in manufacturing, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. And those two sectors have been headed in opposite directions in recent years.
Factory jobs evaporated nearly every month, despite an unusual increase of 5,000 in the most recent jobs report Wednesday. Health care added 137,000 jobs in January, offsetting an employment decline in other sectors.
Total employment in 2025 would have declined if not for the fact that health care added 33,000 jobs each month, economists at BMO Capital Markets said in a research note.
What This Means For The Economy
The fact that job gains are concentrated in health care suggests the labor market may be more fragile than it would appear, despite a healthy top-line number.
The ranks of health care workers are growing as the population ages. Meanwhile, automation and trade turmoil drain away employment opportunities in the once-dominant manufacturing sector, despite President Donald Trump’s tariff policies intended to spark a “renaissance.”
“Health care continues to drive the bulk of job creation in the U.S. economy, while most other labour market indicators … remain soft,” Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO, wrote.
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