Below is a complimentary research note from our Financials analyst Josh Steiner. We are pleased to announce that we recently launched Financials Sector Pro, Josh's new research product. Click HERE to learn more. |
HEDGEYE FINANCIALS WEEKLY LABOR MARKET READING
Initial unemployment insurance claims (SA), filed in the week ending July 11th, were 1.30 million, down -1% w/w. Cumulative initial claims have now hit 51 million, although this includes a fair amount of duplicative filings and overcounting on both the state and PUA levels.
Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) claims filed in the week ending July 4th were 928K, down -11.3% w/w. Recall, PUAs are part of the CARES Act and cover workers ineligible for traditional state UI assistance, including independent contractors, self-employed individuals, and others as detailed in the CARES Act.
In the past, we had taken the PUA figure boxed in purple in the summary table above to represent the number of continuing PUA claims; however, what we have since learned is that this number does not represent the number of claimants, but rather the number of claimant weeks. For instance, if a person filed in July for PUA assistance and was eligible retroactively to have begun receiving PUA benefits beginning in March under the CARES Act, the PUA Continuing number would reflect all the weeks from March through July that that person was eligible to collect rather than just the current week.
Given the unprecedented speed with which initial claims have manifested, our view remains that the best way to contextualize the magnitude of the labor market crisis is to look at continued claims. Continued unemployment insurance claims (SA), the total number of people claiming benefits in all programs for the week ending July 4th, 2020, were 17.3 million, down -2% w/w. Continued claims of 17.3 million are currently ~2.62x the previous high-water mark of ~6.6 million set during the financial crisis.
All in all, as best summarized by our U.S. Macro and Housing Analyst Christian Drake:
"It’s worth taking a quick step back:
The scope and scale of the shock always promised a painfully plodding recovery in the labor market. Just because we are charged with high-frequency contextualization of that recovery doesn’t change that temporal reality." |