DOGE Layoffs Hit, But Still No Significant Change In Initial Or Continuing Jobless Claims
Image source: Pixabay
We continue our exercise in flying blind (into terrain?) as the government shutdown prevented the release of housing permits, starts, and construction this morning; and the Fed did not have the data necessary to update industrial production and capacity utilization. The only current information we have on the housing sector is that mortgage applications declined for the third straight week (but are still 20% higher than one year ago), and prospective buyer traffic remains paltry.
The States did report their initial and continuing jobless claims, and these were updated by FRED this morning. I’ll have a complete report on Monday, but here are two preliminary comments.
First, claims from the DOGE layoffs in the Federal government are now showing up. Here’s the non-seasonally adjusted number of initial claims from DC, Virginia, and Maryland in the past year:
(Click on image to enlarge)
These have increased about 3,000 in the past several weeks to a new 12 month high in Virginia, and close to those highs in DC and Maryland.
Next, here are the YoY% changes in initial and continuing claims for the 4 biggest States: CA, FL, TX, and NY, which together make up about 1/3rd of the total:
(Click on image to enlarge)
Initial claims are higher by 1.1%, and continuing claims (with the typical one week delay) are higher by 0.6%.
As a preliminary matter, the bottom line is that there has been no significant increase in jobless claims in the past few weeks - a neutral reading suggesting a slow, but still expanding, economy.
More By This Author:
Significant Positive News In The Goods Producing SectorMore On Stock Market Indexes’ Advance-Decline Lines: The Healthy And The Sick
Tabulations Of State Level Reports Indicates 228,000 Initial Claims, 1.938 Million Continuing Claims Last Week