Home
News
默认头像

U.S. Jobless Claims Unchanged From Slightly Upwardly Revised Level

2024-06-07MyfxbookMyfxbook
First-time claims for U.S. unemployment benefits remained flat in the week ended April 13th, according to a report released by the Labor Department on Thursday. The report said initial jobless claims came in at 212,000,
U.S. Jobless Claims Unchanged From Slightly Upwardly Revised Level

(RTTNews) - First-time claims for U.S. unemployment benefits remained flat in the week ended April 13th, according to a report released by the Labor Department on Thursday.

The report said initial jobless claims came in at 212,000, unchanged from the previous week's revised level. Economists had expected jobless claims to rise to 215,000 from the 211,000 originally reported for the previous week.

"Jobless claims remain well below levels that would signal a major slowdown in job growth," said Nancy Vanden Houten, Lead U.S. Economist at Oxford Economics.

She added, "A strong labor market gives the Federal Reserve the room to put off rate cuts until inflation gets back on a sustainable path to 2%."

The Labor Department said the less volatile four-week moving average also came in unchanged from the previous week's revised average at 214,500.

Meanwhile, the report said continuing claims, a reading on the number of people receiving ongoing unemployment assistance, crept up by 2,000 to 1.812 million in the week ended April 6th.

The four-week moving average of continuing claims also rose to 1,805,250, an increase of 4,250 from the previous week's revised average of 1,801,000.

Disclaimers

The article is sourced from Myfxbook with the original source credited. The views expressed herein are not affiliated with FXOR; readers are encouraged to approach the content rationally. Copyright belongs to the original author. If unintentional infringement upon media or personal intellectual property rights has occurred, please contact us, and we will promptly remove the content. FXOR merely provides information storage services. The article is compiled and released by FXOR; reprints must indicate the original source.