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July 25, 2025 3 mins
Houston’s job market in July 2025 remains a dynamic and evolving landscape, shaped by national economic pressures and local industrial strengths. The Dallas Fed’s Texas Employment Forecast reports statewide job growth of 1.6 percent annualized between March and June 2025, with Texas’s unemployment rate ticking down to 4.0 percent in June. Houston mirrors these broader trends but with localized fluctuations and some employment contraction visible in select sectors. According to recent county employment figures unveiled by the Employment Security Department, Houston’s labor market shows pockets of strength in education, healthcare, construction, and manufacturing, all growing at over 3 percent in the previous quarter, while professional and business services, other services, and the oil and gas sector experienced declines. The unadjusted local unemployment data makes close tracking of seasonal variations essential, as some workforce figures can spike or dip cyclically each summer or winter.

Despite softness in the oil and gas sector, with Houston’s Halliburton and SLB posting year-over-year net income declines of 33 and 9 percent respectively as reported by Politico Pro, the region continues to be powered by energy, chemicals, logistics, advanced manufacturing, and medical research. JP Morgan notes Houston’s role as a national center for healthcare, energy, real estate, and technology, with critical infrastructure and transport-related sectors also employing large numbers. The property management, education, and logistics fields remain strong employers, with companies like AOG Living and Houston Gateway Academy hiring steadily. A major recent development is CenterPoint Energy’s announcement of a $53 billion grid investment and the planned hiring of nearly 200 lineworkers by the close of 2025 and a total of 800 by 2030, as well as the launch of the Energy Expressway program to train much-needed utility workers.

Current employment portals such as Indeed list over 71,000 jobs available in the Houston area, ranging from warehouse management and AI development to teaching, finance, and supply chain roles. Recent job postings include positions for a Senior Accountant at Nabors, a Field Service Engineer at Siemens Gamesa, and Team Lead for IT Solution Build & Operate at Halliburton. These reflect both legacy energy opportunities and a growing tilt toward technology and digital skills.

Commuting remains predominantly car-based in Houston, but remote roles and flex scheduling are increasing, especially in tech, education, and finance occupations. Government and community organizations such as the Tejano Center with JP Morgan are investing in economic mobility programs targeting housing, workforce training, and upskilling locals for growth fields. Data gaps remain in real-time, seasonally adjusted unemployment at the city level and in granular sector breakdowns, but the overall trajectory is steady, with resilience in essential services and infrastructure, moderated by energy cycles and external market shocks.

Key findings for listeners are that Houston’s job market is adapting through investment, sector diversity, and new training initiatives, helping buffer against volatility in energy and global trade. Major sectors for growth include construction, healthcare, energy infrastructure, and tech, while continuous workforce expansion is anticipated in utilities, digital roles, and education. Thank you for tuning in—please remember to subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Houston's job market in July twenty twenty five remains a
dynamic and evolving landscape shaped by national economic pressures and
local industrial strengths. The Dallas Fed's Texas Employment Forecast reports
statewide job growth of one point six per cent annualized
between March and June twenty twenty five, with Texas's unemployment

(00:20):
rate taking down to four point zero per cent in June.
Houston mirrors these broader trends, but with localized fluctuations and
some employment contraction visible in select sectors. According to recent
county employment figures unveiled by the Employment Security Department, Houston's
labour market shows pockets of strength in education, health care, construction,

(00:42):
and manufacturing, all growing at over three per cent in
the previous quarter, while professional and business services, other services,
and the oil and gas sector experienced declines. The unadjusted
local unemployment data makes close tracking of seasonal variations essential,
as some were workforce figures can spike or dip cyclically
each summer or winter. Despite softness in the oil and

(01:05):
gas sector, with Houston's Halliburton and SLB posting year over
year net income declines of thirty three and nine percent, respectively,
as reported by Political pro the region continues to be
powered by energy, chemicals, logistics, advanced manufacturing, and medical research.
JP Morgan notes Houston's role as a national center for healthcare, energy,

(01:28):
real estate, and technology, with critical infrastructure and transport related
sectors also employing large numbers. The property, management, education, and
logistics fields remain strong employers, with companies like AOG living
in Houston Gateway Academy hiring steadily. A major recent development
is Centrepoint Energy's announcement of a fifty three billion dollar

(01:51):
grid investment and the planned hiring of nearly two hundred
line workers by the close of twenty twenty five and
a total of eight hundred by twenty thirty, as well
as as the launch of the Energy Expressway program to
train much needed utility workers. Current employment portals such as
Indeed list over seventy one thousand jobs available in the
Houston area, ranging from warehouse management and AI development to teaching,

(02:14):
finance and supply chain roles. Recent job postings include positions
for a senior accountant at Nabors, a field service engineer
at Siemen's GAMESA, and team lead for IT Solution Build
and Operate at Halliburton These reflect both legacy energy opportunities
and a growing tilt toward technology and digital skills. Commuting

(02:34):
remains predominantly car based in Houston, but remote roles and
flex scheduling are increasing, especially in tech, education, and finance occupations.
Government in community organizations such as the Tehano Center with
JP Morgan, are investing in economic mobility programs targeting housing,
workforce training, and upskilling locals for growth fields. Data gaps

(02:59):
remain in real time seasonally adjusted unemployment at the city
level and in granular sector breakdowns, but the overall trajectory
is steady, with resilience in essential services and infrastructure moderated
by energy cycles and external market shocks. Key findings for
listeners are that Houston's job market is adapting through investment,

(03:21):
sector diversity, and new training initiatives helping buffer against volatility
and energy and global trade. Major sectors for growth include construction, healthcare, energy, infrastructure,
and tech, while continuous workforce expansion is anticipated in utilities,
digital roles, and education. Thank you for tuning in. Please

(03:45):
remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production.
For more check out Quiet Please dot ai
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