Jobless Claims Fall To Lowest Of Pandemic In Welcome News

On the heels of an ostensibly foreboding ADP employment report, and just a day ahead of July payrolls, the US economy got incrementally good news on the labor market.

“Just” 1.186 million people filed for unemployment benefits last week, the lowest total of the pandemic and well below the 1.4 million the market was expecting. The figure is down considerably from last week’s total, which was revised up slightly to 1,435,000.

It was the first drop in jobless claims in three weeks, and snaps a burgeoning trend that had unnerved markets and added a sense of urgency to stalled stimulus talks.

The four-week moving average (orange line in the figure) dropped to 1,337,750.

In another welcome development, continuing claims dropped to 16,107,000. That is well below the 16.9 million economists expected and down substantially from the previous week’s revised figure.

However (and there’s always a “however”), total claimants in all programs rose back above 32 million to 32,118,678 in the week to July 18. That’s an increase of 1,302,816, and appears to underscore labor market weakness from mid-June to mid-July.

Still, the latest claims data will likely be viewed positively by markets if for no other reason than it snaps a disconcerting streak. Crucially, it’s not good enough to materially affect negotiations in Washington. Claims are still above 1 million, easily higher than any pre-COVID precedent, so nobody holding out for less stimulus can suggest this is unequivocally “good” news outside of the current context.

Now, all eyes will turn to the July jobs report on Friday.

You’re reminded that no matter what the headline print ends up being, the labor market is still nowhere close to where it was pre-pandemic.

That is not a “V”.


 

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3 thoughts on “Jobless Claims Fall To Lowest Of Pandemic In Welcome News

  1. Add in the ā€œ otherwise would be unemployedā€ and the 32M is quite a bit higher.

    The definition of ā€œotherwise would be unemployedā€ are those who are currently not unemployed only because they are being paid by employers who accepted government loans/grants in exchange for keeping people on the payroll register through a certain date.

  2. We get good number tomorrow (better than expected) and markets will roar on the positive economic implications, if we get a bad number market will roar on the increased likelihood of fiscal stimulus agreement, gold and silver will roar regardless of the job print, it is a win win win…

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