The December 13 week is the sample week for the December employment report and comparisons with the sample week of the November employment report are mixed. A look at the separate weeks shows a 3,000 improvement but a look at the 4-week averages shows an 11,000 rise.
Continuing claims, where data lag by a week, are also mixed. Continuing claims in the December 6 week, at 2.373 million, are down a very substantial 147,000 but merely reverse the prior week's 148,000 surge. The 4-week average, at 2.397 million, is up 10,000 in the latest data with the 4-week average trending roughly 30,000 above the month-ago comparison. Good news, though, comes from the unemployment rate for insured workers which is down 1 tenth and back at its recovery low of 1.8 percent.
There are no special factors affecting today's report, one that is not signaling a significant shift, either higher or lower, for the December employment report.
Recent History Of This Indicator:
Initial jobless claims fell 3,000 in the December 6 week to 294,000 but the 4-week average, up slightly to 299,250, was still about 15,000 higher than in early November. Continuing claims tell the same story, up a steep 142,000 to 2.514 million in lagging data for the November 29 week. This was the highest level since mid-August. The 4-week average, up 28,000 to 2.386 million, was also up about 15,000 versus the month-ago comparison.
Initial jobless claims fell 3,000 in the December 6 week to 294,000 but the 4-week average, up slightly to 299,250, was still about 15,000 higher than in early November. Continuing claims tell the same story, up a steep 142,000 to 2.514 million in lagging data for the November 29 week. This was the highest level since mid-August. The 4-week average, up 28,000 to 2.386 million, was also up about 15,000 versus the month-ago comparison.
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