Continuing Claims Rising Rapidly


Although much of the morning’s data topped expectations, one of the areas of weakness was jobless claims. Initial jobless claims were slightly higher than expected coming in at 210K versus expectations of 208K. Additionally, last week’s sub-200K print was revised up to 200K. While that doesn’t steal from the fact that jobless claims have pulled back to some of the stronger levels of the year, the past few weeks are now looking a bit more choppy than they were only a week ago.
On a non-seasonally adjusted basis, claims have begun to tick higher as could be expected for this time of year. At 191.89K, claims are 7.34% higher than they were the comparable week last year. However, that is roughly in line with readings from a couple of years prior to the pandemic.
Albeit higher, initial jobless claims remain at historically healthy levels and are not deteriorating too rapidly. The same cannot be said for continuing claims. Rising to 1.79 million through the week of October 14th (continuing claims are lagged an additional week versus the initial claims number), continuing claims have risen for five straight weeks. That is the longest streak of increases since a 12-week run ending in early December last year, and claims are now at the highest level since May 20th.It has only been five weeks since the recent low of 1.658 million. In that span, continuing claims have risen almost 8%. As shown below, there are plenty of examples of even larger five-week increases in continuing claims counts, the most recent being in Q4 2022, however, it is still a historically rapid rise. The recent increase ranks in the top 5% of all five-week moves on record. Historically, prior increases of that size have mostly (though not always) occurred in the context of a recession. While not exactly covering like-for-like periods, that makes this recent rise in claims even more unusual when compared with GDP data released at the same time showing an impressive 4.9% QoQ annualized growth rate.More By This Author:Large Vs Small Gap Keeps Widening Breadth BombsNasdaq Corrections

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