The U.S. stock market fell again on Thursday as investors held their breath waiting for the much-anticipated jobs report for September.

There is growing concern on Wall Street that the U.S. Federal Reserve’s decisive action to raise interest rates this year will overstep the mark and drive the economy into recession.

A tight labor market and an unemployment rate near multi-year lows give the Fed no reason to abandon its hawkish stance, even as evidence is mounting that the economy is cooling, especially in the housing market and at companies where layoffs are on the rise.

U.S. jobless claims in the U.S. last week came in slightly above expectations, but that is not seen as strong enough evidence that the Fed should pull back from “putting pressure on the gas pedal.”

Fed officials said this week that the central bank intends to keep going until it deems its work done. The Fed already signaled last month that it intends to raise rates another 125 basis points this year.

Here are 3 events that could impact the market on Friday:

1. Job openings data for September

The jobs report will be released at 08:30 Eastern Time (12:30 GMT). Analysts expect the economy added 250,000 jobs last month, down from 315,000 in August.

2. Unemployment rate

The unemployment rate index will be released at the same time, and analysts expect it to remain the same as the month before at 3.7%. This is an important goal for the Fed: to “cool” the economy without causing large job losses. The Fed points to a still high level of open job openings.

3. Participation Rate

The labor market participation rate is another indicator that the Fed is watching closely. The rate for August was 62.4%, and policymakers would like to see it rise to ease tightness in the labor market. The August reading was the highest since April.