Crossing below the 400k new claims barrier is something worth celebrating. We celebrated. The celebration ends. Today’s Unemployment Insurance Weekly Claims Report gave us a headline number of 400k. Last week’s number was revised up 3k to 401k. From the report:
In the week ending July 30, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 400,000, a decrease of 1,000 from the previous week’s revised figure of 401,000. The 4-week moving average was 407,750, a decrease of 6,750 from the previous week’s revised average of 414,500.
The advance seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate was 3.0 percent for the week ending July 23, unchanged from the prior week’s revised rate of 3.0 percent.
The advance number for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment during the week ending July 23 was 3,730,000, an increase of 10,000 from the preceding week’s revised level of 3,720,000. The 4-week moving average was 3,729,750, an increase of 4,500 from the preceding week’s revised average of 3,725,250.
Remember that the current seasonal adjustments are quite sensitive to the exact weeks of manufacturing industry retooling. For that reason it is worth looking at the smoothed data (the 4-week adjusted moving average above), and the unadjusted data. The unadjusted numbers show substantial improvement:
The advance number of actual initial claims under state programs, unadjusted, totaled 339,348 in the week ending July 30, a decrease of 29,939 from the previous week. There were 402,140 initial claims in the comparable week in 2010.
The advance unadjusted insured unemployment rate was 2.9 percent during the week ending July 23, a decrease of 0.1 percentage point from the prior week. The advance unadjusted number for persons claiming UI benefits in state programs totaled 3,663,134, a decrease of 89,947 from the preceding week. A year earlier, the rate was 3.5 percent and the volume was 4,438,886.
The total number of people claiming benefits in all programs for the week ending July 16 was 7,570,439, a decrease of 75,192 from the previous week.
In other news, other economic indicators have shown slowdown starting in April/May (starting with softer petroleum consumption). The ISM numbers for July crossed below the points associated with stronger employment growth (I generally suggest pretending the non-manufacturing numbers have huge error bars, though). Expectations for tomorrow’s Employment Situation Report are soft (but positive).
This was a bad report. Also significant is the fact that we just saw one of our two good reports revised back into bad territory. Aside from the return to school (which won’t help headline numbers due to the strong seasonal factor), there’s not much to look forward to on the unemployment front. The European liquidity crisis seems to be starting to impact foreign demand. I have some short-term hope, but I can’t provide a good justification other than looking at the chart of the new claims 4-week moving average (the trend change away from good has not been confirmed).