Employers Hoard Workers, In Bubble-Like Behavior

The headline, fictional, seasonally adjusted (SA) number of initial unemployment claims for last week came in at 278,000. The Wall Street conomist consensus guess was 290,000.

Rather than playing the expectations game, our interest is in the actual, unmanipulated data. Analyzing that is the only way to be sure that you are seeing what’s really going on.

The Department of Labor reports the actual unadjusted data clearly and illustrates it in comparison with the previous year. The DoL also reports exactly how messy the seasonally adjusted data is by reporting what the seasonal adjustment had forecast based on the arbitrary mathematical calculation of what’s normal. The mainstream financial media crowd chooses to ignore reality by not reporting the actual number.

According to the Department of Labor the actual, unmanipulated numbers were as follows. “The advance number of actual initial claims under state programs, unadjusted, totaled 305,712 in the week ending January 31, an increase of 23,827 (or 8.5 percent) from the previous week. The seasonal factors had expected an increase of 11,211 (or 4.0 percent) from the previous week. There were 357,742 initial claims in the comparable week in 2014.”

Initial Claims and Annual Rate of Change- Click to enlarge

This year’s performance was a little worse than average for that week of January, but the difference wasn’t material. The actual week to week change was an increase of 24,000 (rounded). The 10 year average for that week is an increase of 9,000 (rounded). This year’s increase compared with a virtually unchanged week in the comparable week of 2014, and an increase of 19,000 in that week of 2013.

Actual first time claims were 14.5% lower than the same week a year ago. This is within the normal range of the annual rate of change. Since 2010 the change rate has mostly fluctuated between -5% and -15%.  There is no sign of weakening yet.

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