Well, we have the initial unemployment claims out now (government link), and it appears to point to improvement. Initial claims were 550,000, a decrease of 26,000 from the revised figure of 576,000 (but the initial figure was 570,000, so the drop is 20K, not 26K apples to apples), the 4 week moving average was 570,000, down from 572,250, and the continuing claims number(seasonally adjusted) was 6,088,000, down 159,000 from last week’s revised level of 6,247,000 (only continuing claims were revised up from 6.23m, so the apples to apples drop is actually 142K, not 159K).
Anyone else knowing a pattern in revision numbers, or is it just me?
BTW, note that the continuing claims number drops as people lose benefits or move to emergency unemployment claims.
In any case, with foreclosures up 18% year over year, and poverty rate hitting an 11 year high, 13.2%, things really don’t indicate a rapid improvement.
The weekly claims number needs to be below 400K before we will start seeing increases in employment.
Additionally, we have a leading indicator in Japan, machinery (capital) orders are in the toilet, with orders being the lowest since the start of the survey in 1987.
I’d also stay out of the stock market, as insiders selling continuing to go crazy, and when people sell their own stocks it’s because they know something, even if this knowledge is not sufficient to trigger an criminal or civil investigation.
In the world of central banking, the Bank of England is leaving its benchmark unchanged, and continuing with bond purchases (quantitative easing).
Bonds did fairly well today, with the yields on mortgage backed bonds and US treasuries prices rising, which means that the yields are falling………Unless, of course, you are talking about Polish government bonds, which look to be heading into the world of hurt that their Baltic Republic neighbors are feeling.
Meanwhile, a week inventory report has pushed crude oil up, and the US dollar was up marginally, though whether this is a turn, or just a breather, is unclear.