ADP halts weekly payroll data sharing with the Fed after Waller’s speech disclosed their private data partnership.
Automatic Data Processing (ADP), the largest private payroll processor in the United States, has stopped sharing its proprietary weekly payroll data with the Federal Reserve.
The decision ends a long-standing data stream that had helped the central bank monitor employment trends in near real-time. The change comes at a time when the Fed faces additional data shortages due to the ongoing government shutdown.
The dataset provided the Fed with weekly updates on private payrolls, covering roughly 20% of the U.S. workforce.
This near real-time data helped officials bridge gaps between official monthly labor reports. It was considered a valuable tool for tracking labor market conditions, especially during periods of uncertainty.
Fed officials used the ADP data internally, without it being made public.
According to a speech by Fed Governor Christopher Waller, this private dataset helped build a “measure of weekly payroll employment.” His comments made during an August 28, 2025, event appear to have triggered ADP’s decision to halt the data feed.
ADP acted quickly after Governor Waller publicly referenced its internal partnership with the Federal Reserve. The firm cited privacy and competitive concerns following the disclosure. ADP has not commented beyond confirming that the weekly data will no longer be shared with the central bank.
While ADP continues to publish its monthly National Employment Report, created in collaboration with Stanford’s Digital Economy Lab, the weekly dataset is no longer available.
The report remains a public-facing summary of job market trends but lacks the frequency and detail of the now-discontinued weekly data.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell has reportedly contacted ADP urging the company to resume sharing the data.
However, there has been no confirmation of any agreement or progress toward restoring access. The request reflects the Fed’s concern about losing access to a major source of timely labor market information.
The loss of this dataset coincides with a government shutdown that has already paused the release of other key economic reports. This double disruption limits the Fed’s ability to assess job market changes, which are critical for making informed policy decisions.
There is no timeline for when the ADP data feed may resume, if at all.
The post Crypto News: ADP Cuts Fed’s Data Feed After Waller Speech Shakes Privacy Lines appeared first on Live Bitcoin News.

Song accused BTC Core developers of defecting and failing to address widespread community concerns about non-monetary data on the ledger. Jimmy Song, a Bitcoin (BTC) developer and advocate, slammed the decision by Bitcoin Core developers to remove the OP_Return limit for non-monetary data embedded on the Bitcoin blockchain in the upcoming Bitcoin Core 30 upgrade, calling it “fiat” mentality.Song accused the Core developers of deflecting user concerns about removing the OP_Return limit, which is currently 80 bytes in size, and ignoring the significant pushback from the Bitcoin community and node runners. He also said:You can argue whether that's something desirable or not, but saying you can't define it is a stalling tactic meant to avoid the real argument about actual impact — particularly, the long-term impact of this change,” Song continued.Read more

