Takeaway: Initial state claims of 1.1M rose +14% w/w and PUA claims of 543K rose +11% w/w, while continuing claims of 14.8M declined -4% w/w.

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. 

Initial Unemployment Claims ↑ Continuing Claims ↓  - 05.28.2020 covid jobs report cartoon

As best summarized by Hedgeye's U.S. Macro and Housing Analyst Christian Drake:

First, some quick context around the availability and implementation of Enhanced U.I. Benefits:

  • According to FEMA (recall, Trump’s executive order for extension of Enhanced Unemployment Benefits tapped Disaster relief funds) only seven states have been approved for receipt of funds.
  • Enhanced benefits = $300/wk (-50% vs prior support) with the option for states to contribute another $100/wk.  Since pretty much every state is facing a massive shortfall, elevated health/benefit costs and no clarity on Federal support funds, any state level contributions are expected to be minimal.
  • If an individual’s benefit eligibility is less than $100, they likely will not qualify for the additional $300 enhanced benefit – due to the fact that the states are counting the $100 they pay in “normal” benefits as their 25% contribution required under provisions of enhanced benefit funding.  In other words, the people who need it most (potentially up to 1M workers) won’t be eligible to receive the enhanced payout.   
  • Approved states will only receive three weeks of funding before transitioning to a week-by-week format in an active effort to match and distribute remaining funds equitably.
  • The same implementation challenges associated with changed eligibility requirements that plagued antiquated state systems at the beginning of the outbreak and delayed processing and disbursement of (enhanced) benefits is expected to reoccur (in some measure, at least) alongside this new implementation change…
  • … So, even the earliest states to apply for and receive approval for enhanced benefit funding (back on August 8th)  likely won’t begin disbursing those funds until the back half of August.  

The above is playing out against a larger labor-stimulus backdrop currently being shaped by the following:

  • Enhanced U.I. benefits expired at the end of July with recipients receiving unadjusted benefits in recent weeks  (national average benefit is ~$380/week, back down from the enhanced benefit of ~980/wk).
  • Early evidence (Walmart earnings commentary, grocery sales, etc) suggest consumer spending has begun to moderate as stimulus and enhanced benefits have ended.  
  • Last week we noted that it was unclear the extent to which storm Isaias and any associated damage/power loss across the east coast may or may not have impacted the filing/processing of Claims. ….
  • … its still unclear whether deferred claims or organic deterioration were primary factors in this weeks increase in Initial Claims.
  • PPP funds have been exhausted and a majority of small businesses have indicated acute risk of failure/closure if spending doesn’t fully renormalize by ~year-end.  Full eco renormalization is not a high probability outcome and, suffice to say, the longer demand remains depressed the higher the probability for fresh layoffs … in both direct, front-line sectors and adjacent industries.
  • As we’ve highlighted – while the Trend drop in PUA Claims is encouraging, the larger movement across Initial State Claims (and the simple fact that we are now 5-months into this "temporary" shock) suggest that job loss is shifting away for direct/temporary virus related impact to permanent job loss in adjacent industries. 
  • The decrement in enhanced benefits and the rolling expiry of loan forbearance programs (where deferred loan payments have had the opportunity to be diverted toward other discretionary spending) remain discrete risks to ongoing, durable recovery in the consumption economy.

HEDGEYE FINANCIALS WEEKLY LABOR MARKET READING

Initial Unemployment Claims ↑ Continuing Claims ↓  - Summary

Initial unemployment insurance claims (SA), filed in the week ending August 14th, were 1.1M, up +14% w/w.

Cumulative initial claims have now hit 57.4 million, although this includes a fair amount of duplicate filings and over-counting on both the state and PUA levels.

Initial Unemployment Claims ↑ Continuing Claims ↓  - Initial

Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) claims filed in the week ending August 14th were 543K, up +11% 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.

Initial Unemployment Claims ↑ Continuing Claims ↓  - PUA

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 August 8th, 2020, were 14.8 million, down -4% w/w. Continued claims of 14.8 million are currently ~2.24x the previous high-water mark of ~6.6 million set during the financial crisis. 

Initial Unemployment Claims ↑ Continuing Claims ↓  - Continuing