As business reopenings picked up nationwide, Americans filed nearly 2 million applications for unemployment benefits last week, reflecting a slowing -- though far from a halt -- in job losses.
Initial
The four-week moving average of continuing claims fell to 22.4 million from 22.7 million, the first decline of the pandemic.
“Looking at the broad contour, it still looks very much like continuing claims peaked in early May,” said
U.S. stocks fell at the open. Separate data Thursday
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Transcript of Bloomberg’s TOPLive blog on the jobless claims report U.S. Jobless Claims Understate Reality With Gaps in Federal Data One-Third of America’s Record Unemployment Payout Hasn’t Arrived Next Wave of U.S. Job Cuts Targets Millions of Higher-Paid Workers What Pandemic’s Toll Reveals About Jobs in America: QuickTake
Meanwhile, consumer sentiment improved for a second week as Americans grew less pessimistic about their finances and the buying climate. Bloomberg’s Consumer Comfort
In the week ended May 30, 36 states reported 623,073 initial claims for
What Bloomberg’s Economists Say
“Stubbornly elevated jobless claims are yet another statistic showing that labor market recovery will not be swift. The latest claims data comes on the back of the non-manufacturing ISM survey, which showed the employment subindex barely budged in May from a record-low in April, contradicting the signal from a better-than-expected ADP employment.”
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Thursday’s report underscores the current dichotomy in the labor market. The layoffs are continuing -- and hitting the higher-wage workers and supervisors that escaped the initial wave of layoffs -- but at the same time, a multitude of Americans have headed back to work with varying degrees of business restrictions being eased in all 50 states.
The initial claims figure remains enormous at about nine times the pre-pandemic weekly average, but weeks of decreasing initial claims suggests the worst of the coronavirus-related layoffs is over. Even so, lingering effects from forced business closures and the pandemic itself will likely weigh on any recovery in the labor market for some time.
The May jobs report, out Friday, is forecast to show employers cut payrolls by 8 million, sending the unemployment rate soaring to Great Depression-like levels at 19.5%. It will also show the distribution of job losses across industries. The reference week for the report is in mid-May, so last week’s jobless claims may reflect job losses not captured in the monthly employment report.
California and Florida both saw increases of more than 27,000 in initial claims filed last week; Mississippi was the only other state to show a rise, though minuscule. States seeing significant jumps in continuing claims in the week ended May 23 also included Texas, Pennsylvania, Oregon and Florida.
Georgia, one of the first states to reopen, saw its benefit rolls grow by 19,156 to 750,918.
The continuing claims numbers are “terrible but they’re not as terrible as they were,” said
Given the unprecedented surge of claims in recent months, many economists look to the non-seasonally adjusted figures for a more accurate read on claims. The total reported number under the federal PUA and state programs was 2.23 million last week, down from 3.21 million in the prior week. Many states that have already accepted tens of thousands of claims for the federal assistance are still showing zero claims on the national report.
(Updates with consumer comfort, economist’s comment)
--With assistance from
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Vivek Shankar
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