HOME ZACKS RESEARCH FUNDS PORTFOLIO BROKER RESEARCH MARKETS SCREENING EDUCATION SERVICES
Zacks Rank    Equity Research    Premium Home    My Account    Help    

Zacks Education
Visit Zacks'
Education section for investing guides and other free resources to make you a better investor.
Quote:
Login Free Membership
Search:

 
Analyst Blog  

Initial Unemployment Claims Fall

July 02, 2009 | Comments: 0
Recommended this article (1)
JWN | SKS | KR | WAG
Print    Share

Almost lost in the news of the employment report for June was the initial claims data. There, the news was slightly more positive -- new claims for unemployment insurance dropped to 614,000 from last week’s revised reading of 630,000 (was 627,000).

The four-week average of new claims dipped to 615,000 from last week’s 618,000. While the four-week average is well off its high set back in April, progress has been very slow. Historically, the four-week average of new claims peaks just about the point that the NBER eventually picks as the official end of the recession.

Thus it is conceivable that we could learn sometime early next year that today we are not still in a recession, but somehow I doubt it (yes I know that the four most dangerous words in investing are "this time it’s different"). The other indicators, like capacity utilization, simply have not followed suit, and the four-week average is looking more and more like a plateau than a peak. We did, however, get some confirmation today as continuing claims dropped by 53,000 to 6.703 million. A year ago, continuing claims were just 3.152 million.

Remember, though, this just counts people on regular state unemployment benefits, which normally last for 26 weeks. Well, according to the employment report today, half of all the people unemployed have been out of work for 17.9 weeks or more. That means that more and more people have used up their normal benefits, and will fall out of the continuing claims totals.

The extended benefits are counted as a separate federal program, and that adds 2.438 million more people getting unemployment benefits. There were no people on the extended federal program a year ago. It is thus hard to interpret the decline in continuing claims.

There are two reasons people fall out of the count -- either they get a new job or the benefits run out. I suspect a fair amount of them are in the latter category. That means very real financial hardship, meaning that people will have a hard time going out to shop at not just Nordstrom’s (JWN - Snapshot Report) and Saks (SKS - Analyst Report), but Kroger’s (KR - Analyst Report) and Walgreen’s (WAG - Analyst Report), as well. Those extended unemployment benefits could be proving to be literally, not just figuratively, a lifesaver.

Email

Print

Share

RSS

Rate Pos

Rate Neg

Comment
Read/Post Comments (0) | Recommended this article (1)
 Posting Comment...
There was a problem posting this this comment. Please try back later.
[CLICK TO CLOSE X]
Comments (Limit 1000 Characters - Used: 0)
Display Name: Email Address:  
 Loading Comments...
Be the first to comment on this article!
Best Stocks. Best Insight. Join Now...it's FREE!
Over 550,000 investors look forward to the timely insights in our email newsletter; Zacks Profit from the Pros. In each daily issue you will find:
  • Free  Four Zacks #1 Rank "Strong Buy" Stocks
  • Free  Timely Market Commentary
  • Free  Wealth Management Tips
  • Free  Profitable Strategy Screens
  • Free  Bull and Bear Stocks of the Day
Zacks FREE Registration

More Zacks Resources

Market Summary Nov 26, 2009 07:07 am ET
DJIA 10464.4  30.69 0.29%
NASD 2176.05  6.87 0.32%
S&P 500 1110.63  4.98 0.45%
Sponsored Links