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Initial Claims for Unemployment Fall, but Less Than Expected

Department of LaborThe Labor Department reported that in the week ended June 5, initial claims for unemployment fell only 3,000 to 456,000. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had predicted claims to fall to 450,000. The four-week average rose to 463,000 last week from 460,000 previously.

Here is a breakdown of of subcategories that were reported:

  • The number of people continuing to receive jobless benefits declined by 235,000 in the week ended May 29, the lowest since December 2008. This number is deceiving because it does not indicate how many persons exhausted their benefits.

Continue reading Initial Claims for Unemployment Fall, but Less Than Expected

Weekly Jobless Claims Fall

The Labor Department announced Thursday that the number of people applying for unemployment benefits remained virtually unchanged from last week's 444,000 claims. In the most recent week, the number of jobless claims dropped by 4,000, but the data from a week earlier was revised up by 4,000.

The data came in higher than expected, as some experts called for a drop to 440,000 claims in the past week. In the wake of this data, Treasurys and the dollar have increased, while some of the morning's momentum was tempered.

Continue reading Weekly Jobless Claims Fall

Unemployment claims: you can make it look good if you want

Ten months ago again, newly laid-off unemployment claims fell to their lowest level in close to a year, suggesting that the job market may be showing signs of life. It feels like today's situation is the same.

Of course, declining claims isn't the same as new hiring, but at least it suggests that the bleeding is slowing down. The new unemployment rate is due to be published in a few minutes, and economists expect the rate to rise to 9.9%, a hair over September's 9.8%.

Continue reading Unemployment claims: you can make it look good if you want

First-time jobless claims fall faster than expected

First-time claims for jobless benefits fell last week, hitting the lowest level we've seen since January. The U.S. Department of Labor pegged the number at 521,000. This is down from the previous week's 554,000 (which had been revised upward). Wall Street economists anticipated 540,000. Claims of this type have fallen four times in five weeks, and the four-week average reached 539,750 – its lowest level since January 17, 2009.

In general, first-time claims for unemployment benefits have been declining since the spring, though slowly. Unfortunately, they still remain well above the 325,000 that economists claim to be indicative of a healthy economy.

Continue reading First-time jobless claims fall faster than expected

Jobless claims rise more than expected

The Labor Department reported that initial claims for unemployment rose to 551,000 from 534,000 in the previous week, much more than the 5,000 economists had expected. The number remaining on the rolls fell by 70,000 to 6.09 million, but this statistic likely is unreliable because of all the people who have exhausted their benefits.

Congress has added 53 weeks of benefits on top of the the usual 26 weeks. Now with thousands of people having exhausted their benefits, Congress is considering extending benefits for another 13 weeks.

Continue reading Jobless claims rise more than expected

U.S. jobless claims unexpectedly rise by 15,000

Bloomberg reports that 15,000 more Americans filed claims for unemployment last week, bringing the total to 576,000. Economists had predicted a drop in claims to 550,000.

The four-week moving average rose to 570,000 from 565,750.

Thirty-six states reported an increase, with Tennessee and North Carolina showing the biggest increases. California showed the biggest decrease as employment in construction jobs kicked in.

Continue reading U.S. jobless claims unexpectedly rise by 15,000

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Last updated: May 29, 2012: 12:03 AM

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