Consensus | Consensus Range | Actual | Previous | Revised | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Initial Claims - Level | 225K | 218K to 230K | 215K | 223K | 224K |
Initial Claims - Change | -9K | 4K | 5K | ||
4-Week Moving Average | 220.75K | 223K | 223.25K |
Highlights
Seasonal factors had expected an increase in unadjusted claims of 12,303 (+5.7 percent) from the previous week, but they actually rose by just 3,176 (+1.5 percent), instead.
Kentucky and Missouri were the only states with a noticeable increase in unadjusted first-time claims. California and Tennessee reported significant declines.
Insured unemployment rose by 41,000 in the April 5 week to 1.885 million, from a downwardly revised 1.844 million in the prior week and continuing claims are higher by 92,000 compared to the same week a year ago, once again underscoring the tepid hiring conditions. The four-week moving average is up by 1,000 to 1.867 million, from a revised 1.866 million in the April 5 week. The insured rate of unemployment remained at 1.2 percent in the April 5 week.
Looking past the constant yo-yoing of the initial claims numbers, the persistently high level of continuing claims (yet to drop below 1.8 million since May 2024), is a warning about the entrenched weakness in the labor market.
Market Consensus Before Announcement
Definition
Description
There's a downside to it, though. Unemployment claims, and therefore the number of job seekers, can fall to such a low level that businesses have a tough time finding new workers. They might have to pay overtime wages to current staff, use higher wages to lure people from other jobs, and in general spend more on labor costs because of a shortage of workers. This leads to wage inflation, which is bad news for the stock and bond markets. Federal Reserve officials are always on the look-out for inflationary pressures.
By tracking the number of jobless claims, investors can gain a sense of how tight, or how loose, the job market is. If wage inflation looks threatening, it's a good bet that interest rates will rise, bond and stock prices will fall, and the only investors in a good mood will be the ones who tracked jobless claims and adjusted their portfolios to anticipate these events.
Just remember, the lower the number of unemployment claims, the stronger the job market, and vice versa.