This morning the Department of Labor released Weekly Unemployment Claims numbers.Initial Claims
Neither Hurricane Milton nor Hurricane Helene had a lasting impact on new claims.The Bloomberg Econoday consensus was an increase to 247,000 from 241,000. Instead initial claims fell by 15,000.The good news ends there.Continued Claims
Insured UnemploymentThe key phrase above is “insured unemployment”.After someone expires all of their unemployment benefits they become “uninsured unemployment” and the Department of Labor stops tracking.Expiring Unemployment Benefits
Benefits ExpiredOther than Montana and Massachusetts, continuing unemployment claims die at a maximum of 26 week.Continuing claims understate long-term unemployment by the number of people unemployed for over 26 weeks (and then some factoring in seven states with lower benefits and states with sliding scales of benefits).Ominous TrendsI discussed the above on September 19 in The Ominous Reason Continued Unemployment Claims Have ImprovedThe improvement (see the September dip in the lead chart) portrayed a rosy view that did not exist.Continued Claims and 27+ Weeks UnemploymentNeither Hurricane Milton nor Helene has anything to do with 26 weeks of unemployment, but the hurricanes do have a small impact on recent continued claims (red line).The above chart looks ominous because it is ominous. And those numbers are September averages. October will be much worse.Please don’t tell me the numbers are low. They aren’t. But more importantly, it’s major upturns from lows that matter, not the raw numbers.Continued Plus Long-Term Unemployment Claims Suggest Recession Right NowOn the basis of continued claims instead of unemployment rate, I created a new recession indicator.The Mish-McKlevey recession signal has no false negatives since 1948. It has either zero of two false positives depending on the level needed to reset the indicator.For discussion, please see Continued Plus Long-Term Unemployment Claims Suggest Recession Right NowThe current value of 0.28 is very elevated and strongly suggests the US is in recession right now.More By This Author:Fed Beige Book Shows Only 3 Of 12 Regions Growing, 3 Declining Head NAR Cheerleader Blames The Election For Poor Existing-Home Sales 20 Percent Of Households Making Over $150,000 Live Paycheck To Paycheck