Unemployment
San Fran Fed On Record Highs In New Unemployment Insurance
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/10/2009 19:21 -0500"Unemployment insurance benefits have been on an upward trend over the past two
decades, partially reversing an earlier decline. The trend is associated with shifts toward a
higher share of job losers among the unemployed and longer durations of unemployment,
which may cause benefits to lapse for some recipients as labor market weakness persists." - Aisling Cleary, FRBSF
Rosie On Unemployment
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/04/2009 13:03 -0500"As an aside, the Bureau of Labor Statistics also publishes a number from the Household survey that is comparable to the nonfarm survey (dubbed the population and payroll-adjusted Household number), and on this basis, employment sank — brace yourself — by over 1 million, which is unprecedented. We shall see if the nattering nabobs of positivity discuss that particularly statistic in their post-payroll assessments; we are not exactly holding our breath." - David Rosenberg
Real Unemployment Rate Hits 16.8%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/04/2009 08:22 -0500
As markets digest the worse, yet somehow better, than expected 9.7% unemployment, the real state of the labor market is much worse, as indicated by the U-6 number, which has hit a recent record of 16.8% on a seasonally adjusted basis. As a reminder, the "U-6 represents total unemployed, plus all marginally attached workers, plus total employed part time for economic reasons, as a percent of the civilian labor force plus all marginally attached workers." In other words, in reality the U.S. labor market is likely about as bad as Spain in terms of undoctored jobless data.
Unemployment Rate By State: July Update, California Hits 11.9%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/21/2009 09:49 -0500
The most recent BLS State unemployment data is out. State by state unemployment increased by 1.0% on average (unweighted) from June to July.
256,357 Initial Unemployment Claimants In June, 2,519 Mass Layoff Events
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/23/2009 13:39 -0500
The BLS has released the most recent mass layoff event and initial jobless claim data. The initial claimant data has dropped by about 34k month over month, and is 70.7% higher on a trailing twelve month basis. Comparable data for the initial jobless claims apps.
Unemployment Rate By State: June Update
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/19/2009 09:04 -0500
The most recent BLS State unemployment data is out. At this rate of job loss, Michigan will see 100% unemployment in about one year (give or take). Otherwise, state by state unemployment increased by 2.8% on average (unweighted) from May until June.
The Fed Sees Increasing Unemployment As A Positive For GDP
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/15/2009 13:10 -0500![]()
The economic mavens in DC have totally lost it. Now an increase in unemployment will allegedly lead to a rebound in GDP??? And just who is supposed to buy this garbage any more?
White House Expects 10% Unemployment In Next Few Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/27/2009 12:02 -0500Developing story: this means that unemployment will either be allowed to reach its true, "unadjusted" levels in the low teens shortly, or will be kept artificially low for 2-3 months, allowing that to be spun as a green shoot by CNBC. Time will tell.
White House Expects 10% Unemployment In Next Few Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/22/2009 18:37 -0500Developing story: this means that unemployment will either be allowed to reach its true, "unadjusted" levels in the low teens shortly, or will be kept artificially low for 2-3 months, allowing that to be spun as a green shoot by CNBC. Time will tell.
Unemployment Rate By State
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/19/2009 14:45 -0500The state unemployment data from the BLS is likely significantly flawed but it makes sense to visualize it nonetheless. The chart below demonstrates both the monthly change in unemployment (April - May 2009) as well as the year-over-year increase in state unemployment (vs. May 2008). Notably, Michigan was in a world of pain even before the bankruprtcy of GM and Chrysler. The green shoot: seems cattle ranchers are in high demand in N/S Dakota and Wyoming.
Unemployment Rate By State
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/19/2009 14:45 -0500The state unemployment data from the BLS is likely significantly flawed but it makes sense to visualize it nonetheless. The chart below demonstrates both the monthly change in unemployment (April - May 2009) as well as the year-over-year increase in state unemployment (vs. May 2008). Notably, Michigan was in a world of pain even before the bankruprtcy of GM and Chrysler. The green shoot: seems cattle ranchers are in high demand in N/S Dakota and Wyoming.
Unemployment Rate By State
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/19/2009 14:45 -0500The state unemployment data from the BLS is likely significantly flawed but it makes sense to visualize it nonetheless. The chart below demonstrates both the monthly change in unemployment (April - May 2009) as well as the year-over-year increase in state unemployment (vs. May 2008). Notably, Michigan was in a world of pain even before the bankruprtcy of GM and Chrysler. The green shoot: seems cattle ranchers are in high demand in N/S Dakota and Wyoming.
Unemployment Rate By State
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/19/2009 11:21 -0500
The state unemployment data from the BLS is likely significantly flawed but it makes sense to visualize it nonetheless.
The Doubling Of Unemployment "Paychecks"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/18/2009 13:13 -0500As program trading computers pretend to care about such fundamental things as continuing jobless claims, a peculiar trend emerges.
The Doubling Of Unemployment "Paychecks"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/18/2009 13:13 -0500As program trading computers pretend to care about such fundamental things as continuing jobless claims, a peculiar trend emerges.


