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The frozen market

  • Writer: Hassan Abbas
    Hassan Abbas
  • 6 days ago
  • 2 min read
Asian man in a button-down shirt working on a laptop at a window counter with a city skyline behind him

Job openings are sitting near a two-year high. Almost no one is changing jobs.


The quits rate fell to 1.9 percent in April, down from 2.0 percent in March (Bureau of Labor Statistics, Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, released June 2, 2026). It has been grinding lower for more than a year.


What a quit really measures

The quits rate counts the workers confident enough to leave a job without another one lined up. It is the clearest read on how much power people feel they have. At 1.9 percent, that confidence sits near its lowest point since the pandemic recovery began.


Staying put, not settling in

People are not staying because the work got better. They are staying because they do not believe they can do better elsewhere. The Indeed Hiring Lab, reviewing the April data in June 2026, called it a low-hire, low-fire market, where the hires and quits rates both remain depressed. Employers are not cutting. Workers are not moving.


When no one leaves

A quit is never just one person's exit. It is a seat left open for someone else to take. When quits dry up, that chain of openings dries up with it.


This is why a frozen job market falls hardest on the unemployed. Openings reached 7.6 million in April, yet employers completed only 5.12 million hires, a drop of 419,000 from March (Bureau of Labor Statistics, April 2026). The postings are there. The hiring behind them has stalled.


Reading a still market

A frozen market rewards a different kind of search. When few roles open and each one draws a crowd, applying in volume stops working. Precision starts to.


CoBlack sources openings directly from employer career pages and matches on capability rather than keywords, so a job seeker sees the roles that are genuinely live, not the ones a posting only implies.


The market may be frozen. The search does not have to be.

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