U.S. jobless claims fall by 5,000 to 305,000
The number of new applications for unemployment benefits fell by 5,000
to 305,000 in the week ended Sept. 21, the Labor Department said
Thursday. Economists polled by MarketWatch had expected claims to jump
to 327,000 on a seasonally adjusted basis. A government official said
Labor has been told by California that the state eliminated a backlog of
claims that built up after computer-related processing delays. The
delays caused the number of initial claims to fall below 300,000 in
early September for the first time in more than six years. The average
of new claims over the past month, a more reliable gauge than the
volatile weekly number, dropped by 7,000 to 308,000. That's the lowest
level since June 2007. Also, the government said continuing claims
increased by 35,000 to a seasonally adjusted 2.82 million in the week
ended Sept. 14. Continuing claims reflect the number of people already
receiving benefits. Initial claims from two weeks ago, meanwhile, were
revised up to 310,000 an original reading of 309,000, based on more
complete data collected at the state level.
The number is meaningless at this point as this point so why even post it as the system itself is being gamed. And of course not to go unscathed the typical drive-by in Gold.
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