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Showing posts with label Economic Reports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Economic Reports. Show all posts

Mixed Labor Data Messages Clarified

mixed labor data messages clarified
It Still Spells Trouble

Weekly Jobless Claims have produced an improving trend over the last month and continued telling that same story at latest check. However, the Labor Department's Employment Situation Report for November, published last week, still showed an increase in the unemployment rate and a moderated rate of net job addition. So what gives then? Well, keep reading...


Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

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Mixed Labor Data Messages Clarified



wall streetAmericans must be confused by the mixed messages offered by the Labor Department. While weekly jobless claims clearly seem to be moderating, the monthly unemployment rate just spiked again. Weekly Jobless Claims for the period ended December 4, fell 17K to 421K, down from 438K the week just prior. Still, the latest Labor Department data showed the unemployment rate increased to 9.8% in November, up from the 9.6% rate seen through the prior three months. We will clear up this inconsistency for you here so you can concentrate on logical consistencies of the day, like holiday parties and foreclosure notices.

The first thing you must understand is that weekly jobless claims will occur even in the best of economic environments. There will always be a business failing, or downsizing or consolidating for whatever reason. In order to see the unemployment rate change for the better, we need a weekly flow of jobless claims somewhere short of 400K, or closer to 300K.

The size of the labor force is always increasing also, raising the bar so to speak as America's youths graduate into working age and begin seeking employment. Considering the tough environment, we also have pressure from retirees returning to work these days. When it comes down to it, we need economic growth to increase demand for employees. That can come from increased consumer spending, but also from the growth of business and industry where opportunity may lie untapped. This is why President Obama places so much hope in alternative energy. It can be a replacement industry for coal and pick up the slack from a mature US auto industry. Further, the auto industry, as well as all US manufacturing can benefit from a fairer international trade playing field, another of the administration's good goals (note South Korean trade deal and pressure on the Chinese with regard to their currency).

The four-week moving average of weekly initial jobless claims illustrates the favorable trend we outlined above. The claims average slipped another 4,000 this last week, to 427,500, the lowest it has been in two years. Furthermore, the seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate improved anther two-tenths of a point, to 3.2% for the period ended November 27. This is the kind of data that gave economists the confidence they exhibited in setting their non-farm payroll forecasts for November at +168,000, based on Bloomberg's survey. This is precisely the reason why the market was so surprised on Friday when payrolls instead measured +39,000.

The good news relayed by the weekly claims data seems to be that companies are laying people off at a slower rate, but that message was absent in the latest monthly layoff data. Challenger, Gray & Christmas reported that announced corporate layoffs surged to an 8-month high in November, reaching 48,711. It was the highest announced job-cut total since March, when companies announced layoffs of 67,611. Seasonal influence to the November disaster may have played a role according to Challenger, but given that this year's period was just 3.3% short of the prior year count, we are not so sure. It is more likely that there is a cyclical factor at play, and the good news is that it's a lagging indicator.

Government and nonprofit employers were at the forefront of firing in November, announcing 10,761 layoffs through the month. In fact, while overall announced layoffs dropped 60% this year to date, the government and non-profit sector have led the full year's downsizing, cutting 138,979 jobs. Obviously, this is the direct result of heightened pressure on governments, municipal, state and federal, to cut costs to balance budgets or otherwise positively impact deficits.

Flying within radar, but not often spoken of is the decrease in charitable contributions that follows downturns in economic activity. Layoffs in this sector should lag general economic decline, and the same goes for government, which is reactionary. One step the government might take in providing stimulus is by instituting a firing freeze at all government levels. These can be controlled at the federal level, and subsidized otherwise. Keep people working, and you keep them sharp and spending at normal rates.

We could call the lag in government and charitable layoffs good news, if these same two factors played important roles in the increased unemployment rate in November. Indeed, government job decline of 11,000 affected November's data, but the reasons for the sharp miss were much broader. That said, Challenger noted a historical tendency for late-in-the-year cuts, and also said increased hiring announcements offered some offset. To me this sounds like the data-minder was simply molding its qualitative reporting to fit the positive consensus outlook for the Labor Department data, which was yet to be disproved (reported two days later).

Inspection of the Employment Situation Report showed big reductions in Retail Trade (-28.1K), Manufacturing (-13K), Financial Activities (-9K) and Construction (-5K), complementing the government (-11K) and other services (-8K) drops. The big retail industry shrinkage was a shocker to many, but understood within short time. Retailers had added to staff earlier this year, in order to best exploit the intensified deal-seeking community. There were earlier-than-Black Friday deals run, and extended hours offered on Black Friday and after, which needed to be staffed for. This reported decline might reflect a temporary lull in part-timers, who could be rehired before Christmas (heard first here). The moderation in manufacturing, at this point, has been well-documented here, and it goes on within ongoing catastrophic environments in the finance and construction fields. Look for increasing M&A activity to drive change for Wall Street in 2010, barring a problematic war with Iran.

We like to look into the bottom line numbers to get to the truth. When we do that for November's employment data, we discover that the unemployed count (numerator) increased by 276K, to 15,119,000. The Civilian Labor Force (denominator) also increased, as it should, but by only 103K, to 154,007,000. Oftentimes in the past, change in the unemployment rate has been impacted by suspect change in the size of the labor force.

Biased Data Producers Should Be Audited!

We find it funny that no matter what party controls the White House, economic data seems to favor its needs. You will recall how economic data (especially with regard to jobs), while bad, fell off a cliff almost immediately after George W. Bush lost the presidential election. We have to wonder if the data flow was held up in Atlas-like fashion by biased Bush-backers running these agencies. A lot of these jobs are filled by politicos, or active supporters of the candidates post election. This time around, just as President Obama needed populous support to get tax breaks cut off for the rich, and while the GOP held hostage unemployment insurance extensions, unemployment unexpectedly spiked sharply and nonfarm payrolls severely missed forecasts. The result was intensified pressure on the government to extend unemployment insurance further, which favored the President and the Democrats, considering the GOP's positioning. Hey this seems to happen on both sides, and I'm just saying… Someone needs to look into this.

Under-Employment

The underemployment rate offers a better forecasting tool than unemployment for the American economy, because it shows how stressed American consumers really are. The under-employment rate takes into account part-time workers, who would rather be working full-time (and oftentimes once were). These people are thus spending a lot less as they seek to sustain their old lifestyles, meaning homes they cannot really afford and cars that do not fit their current income. The part-timers count declined last month by 182K; the impact to the labor rates here depends on whether the part-timers replaced their hours with full-time work or hit the jobless line instead. Since unemployment increased, the latter seems to be the case this time around. Job losses may have been driven here by the declines in weak sectors this month. Companies fire part-timers first, just as they hire them first. Temporary workers increased in numbers in November though, by 40K.

The under-employment rate also adds back into the calculation the group of folks that the government deems removed from the labor force, simply due to long-term unemployment induced depression that leads them to stop job search activity over a short span of weeks. We think they still count, and we know they are impacting GDP.

Thus, if we add back the 2.531 million (previously 2.602 mln.) displaced workers to the labor market, and include the 8.972 million (previously 9.154 mln.) underemployed part-timers in the unemployed count, adjusted unemployment reaches ((15.119M + 2.531M + 8.972M) / (154.007M + 2.531M)) * 100 = 17.0 %. That's equal to October's rate, and compares to September's 17.1% rate, 16.7% in August; 16.5% in July and June; 16.6% in May; 17.1% in April; 16.9% in March; 16.8% in February; and 16.4% in January. You can see clearly here that the factors that impact underemployment but not unemployment shifted to the unemployed pool, which factors in both calculations. Thus underemployment held steady, while unemployment increased.

In conclusion, while some comfort can be taken from the fact that we seem to have stopped bleeding jobs, we remain at risk of reopening the wound. Furthermore, the burden of a large pool of long-term unemployed Americans acts as a major drag to economic growth. It thus becomes a leading factor, versus the lagging indicator it is often labeled. Thus, the mixed message provided by the two labor reports is consistent with reality. Neither data-point is reporting in error or misleading economic forecasters. Rather, both offer insight into a complex labor situation. To put it simply, we're still troubled.

FYI:
The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending Nov. 20 were in Alaska (6.1 percent), Puerto Rico (5.5), Oregon (4.4), Nevada (3.9), Pennsylvania (3.9), California (3.7), Idaho (3.7), Montana (3.7), New Jersey (3.7), Arkansas (3.6), Wisconsin (3.6), and Connecticut (3.5).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending Nov. 27 were in Wisconsin (+7,545), Iowa (+2,789), Idaho (+1,810), Indiana (+1,667), and Washington (+1,260), while the largest decreases were in Texas (-8,742), California (-8,320), Florida (-7,027), Georgia (-5,823), and North Carolina (-4,171).

Article should interest investors in Paychex (Nasdaq: PAYX), Manpower (NYSE: MAN), Robert Half International (NYSE: RHI), 51Job Inc. (Nasdaq: JOBS), Monster World Wide (NYSE: MWW), Korn/Ferry International (NYSE: KFY), Administaff (NYSE: ASF), Kforce (Nasdaq: KFRC), TrueBlue (NYSE: TBI), Dice Holdings (NYSE: DHX), Kelly Services (Nasdaq: KELYA), SFN Group (NYSE: SFN), CDI Corp. (NYSE: CDI), Cross Country Healthcare (Nasdaq: CCRN), On Assignment (Nasdaq: ASGN), AMN Healthcare Services (NYSE: AHS), Barrett Business Services (Nasdaq: BBSI), Hudson Highland Group (Nasdaq: HHGP), StarTek (NYSE: SRT), RCM Technologies (Nasdaq: RCMT), VirtualScopics (Nasdaq: VSCP), American Surgical (OTC: ASRG.OB), Medical Connections (OTC: MCTH.OB), iGen Networks (OTC: IGEN.OB), St. Joseph (OTC: STJO.OB), General Employment Enterprises (NYSE: JOB), Total Neutraceutical (OTC: TNUS.OB), TeamStaff (Nasdaq: TSTF), Stratum (OTC: STTH.OB), Purespectrum (OTC: PSRU.OB), Corporate Resource Services (OTC: CRRS.OB), Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), J.P. Morgan Chase (NYSE: JPM), Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), Citigroup (NYSE: C), Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS), Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC), TD Bank (NYSE: TD), PNC Bank (NYSE: PNC), General Electric (NYSE: GE), Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT), McDonald's (NYSE: MCD), Alcoa (NYSE: AA), American Express (NYSE: AXP), Boeing (NYSE: BA), Caterpillar (NYSE: CAT), Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO), Chevron (NYSE: CVX), DuPont (NYSE: DD), Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS), Home Depot (NYSE: HD), Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), IBM (NYSE: IBM), Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ), Kraft (NYSE: KFT), Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO), 3M (NYSE: MMM), Merck (NYSE: MRK), Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT), Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG), AT&T (NYSE: T), Travelers (NYSE: TRV), United Technologies (NYSE: UTX), Verizon (NYSE: VZ), Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM). Today’s EPS report list highlights news from American International Group (NYSE: AIG), Washington Post (NYSE: WPO), Ventas (NYSE: VTR), Coventry Health Care (NYSE: CVH), American Tower (NYSE: AMT), AerCap Holdings (NYSE: AER), Allied Healthcare (Nasdaq: AHPI), Arbor Realty Trust (NYSE: ABR), Beazer Homes (NYSE: BZH), Brookfield Asset Management (NYSE: BAM), Cadence Pharmaceuticals (Nasdaq: CADX), Central European Distribution (Nasdaq: CEDC), Dish Network (Nasdaq: DISH), Doral Financial (NYSE: DRL), Entech Solar (Nasdaq: ENSL), Fortress Investment (NYSE: FIG), FTI Consulting (NYSE: FCN), Hooper Holmes (AMEX: HH), IAMGold (NYSE: IAG), Icahn Enterprises (NYSE: IEP), Liberty Media (Nasdaq: LINTA), Nathan’s Famous (Nasdaq: NATH), Novavax (Nasdaq: NVAX), Princeton Review (Nasdaq: REVU), Rand Capital (Nasdaq: RAND), Rosetta Resources (Nasdaq: ROSE), Sabre Holdings (NYSE: TSG), Superior Industries (NYSE: SUP), TETRA Tech (NYSE: TTI), Toyota (NYSE: TM) and YRC Worldwide (Nasdaq: YRCW).

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Business News Review 11-30-10

business news review
Economic Data Analysis

We covered the international market activity in an earlier article today, "Spanish Bond Spreads Widen, European Unemployment Grows, Indian GDP Thrives." The day's business news review covers the weekly same-store sales data for a very important shopping period; home price data; an economic barometer; and confidence measures of both consumers and investors.


Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

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Business News Review



business writerThe day's business news review covers a busy economic report schedule, and one that was mostly positive. The problem was that the positives were not overwhelmingly so, and the negative was an important one. Home prices slid again in broad-based fashion, and our double-dip forecast of old was repeated on TV by S&P economist, David Blitzer, who said there would be a lot of "I told you so" and "double-dip" comments. It sounded to us as if it were meaningless (we suppose it's not to you). The fact is, it was not, and we led the investment community in forecasting the double-dip in housing. On the positive side, good readings on consumer and investor confidence were nice to see, but not reliable to invest on.

Weekly Same-Store Sales

Beware the weekly same-store sales data, which on first blush give the impression of a solid revival of the consumer. Remember that this year's measured period included the Saturday after Black Friday, whereas last year's period did not. You can bet your bottom dollar that the Saturday after Black Friday is significantly better for store traffic than the Saturday before it. Also, a great deal more Americans are likely seeking bargains this year, after draining their resources over the course of another bad year. Qualifiers provided, the International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC) reported sales rose just 0.5% over the immediately prior week. Sales marked a 3.5% gain over the prior year period. Redbook noted year-over-year sales 4.9% higher than in 2009.

Cyber Monday was reportedly strong, based on the 15% increase in ecommerce reported by research firm, IBM Coremetrics. From Thursday through Saturday, sales increased 14% against the prior year.

I've two points to make: First, last year was an anomaly, an extremely poor year for all economic activity. In other words, the bar was set quite low. Secondly, this again might reflect a reluctant shopper, shopping at home perhaps due to depression brought on by missing deals and the usual shopping outing on Black Friday. I know someone who did not expect to shop, and yet bought something on Monday (did you?). It should also reflect an increased number of bargain seekers, for necessity's sake. Thus, I'm not too enthused to see this data, but we will take it just the same.

Consumer Confidence

It's a smooth transition into the consumer mood after covering sales activity. The Conference Board reported on the month of November today, noting an increase in the consumer mood. The Index gained a couple points, rising to a mark of 54.1, up from 49.9 in October. The same component that took this measure down in months past, gave it renewed life this time around; the Expectations Index recovered significantly, so hope never dies. November's result also beat economists' expectations for a reading of 52.0. We expect a change here if the government lets unemployment extensions die and revives the death tax at the same time. That said, the current level of confidence is not exactly euphoric either.

Investor Confidence

State Street (NYSE: STT) measures investor confidence monthly, and November offered signs of life. According to State Street, institutional investors were greater risk takers in the US and Europe this month, but Asian investors took a step back. The global confidence measure gained 9.3 points, while US confidence improved 12.2 points this month. Surprisingly, European investors had great appetite in November as well, but we have a feeling that is changing dynamically.

Home Prices

The S&P Case Shiller Home Price Index was reported this morning for September. We heard Professor Case, an all around nice guy we don't dislike here, address an issue we've had with the report this morning on TV. He noted that the report is this late, covering September, because it is complete. There will be no revisions, nor future reporting of better September numbers. That's great, but why can't it be completed sooner, given the name on the report…

That said, this late data reflected what we've already seen in the Existing Home Sales data, and what Wall Street Greek forecast months ago. Home prices slid in September and seem to be suffering from an eroding false basis price point. The 10-City Index produced a 0.7% month-over-month price decline, and the US National Home Price Index gave back 2.0% in the third quarter. Prices are 1.5% below their year ago levels, according to the group.

18 of 20 MSAs covered by S&P noted price decrease in September, so the problem is broad-based and definite. The reporting group confirmed something we've been saying; in our words: without government stilts, housing has a significant handicap to overcome. It is weighed down by a heavy inventory of distressed properties, and given the underemployment rate, it's lacking energy to drive forward.

Chicago PMI

The Chicago Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) measures area business activity, including both manufacturing and nonmanufacturing. This latest report covering the month of November showed improvement in the index, to 62.5, from 60.6 in October. A reading above 50 marks expansion, so we've got faster growth to report here. Analysts were not looking for quite this good a number either, where the consensus mark was set at 61.0. I view this data point as the most positive on the day, which is one that I only see modestly positive in aggregate.

Corporate Wire

Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is facing an antitrust lawsuit by the EU, ala Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT). The complaint waged argues the search giant favors its own sites and its customers' sites over those of rivals in paid and non-paid search rankings. Meanwhile, rumor has it that Google is going to acquire two year old internet phenom, Groupon, for, get this, $6 billion dollars. Not a bad turn around on a young startup. Groupon has proven an effective tool for small businesses and others to fill the room for openings and to create a buzz around a business. The acquisition capitalizes on local search interests Google has documented in its regular work.

Look for analysts' and shareholders' meetings at Hologic (Nasdaq: HOLX), Lowe's (NYSE: LOW), Biogen Idec (Nasdaq: BIIB) and JDSU (Nasdaq: JDSU). The day's EPS schedule highlights reports by Avanir Pharmaceuticals (Nasdaq: AVNR), Rosetta Genomics (Nasdaq: ROSG), SemGroup (Nasdaq: SEMG), Trina Solar (NYSE: TSL) and DELEK (OTC: DGRLY.PK). The remainder of the schedule includes Barnes & Noble (NYSE: BKS), BluePhoenix Solutions (Nasdaq: BPHX), China Bak Battery (Nasdaq: CBAK), Copart (Nasdaq: CPRT), Funtalk China (Nasdaq: FTLK), Ingles Markets (Nasdaq: IMKTA), Linktone (Nasdaq: LTON), Lukoil (OTC: LUKOY.PK), National Bank of Greece (NYSE: NBG), Omnivision Technologies (Nasdaq: OVTI), Patriot Transportation (Nasdaq: PATR), Rada Electronic (Nasdaq: RADA), Thor Industries (NYSE: THO) and Universal Technical Institute (NYSE: UTI).

The Credit Suisse Group (NYSE: CS) Annual Technology Conference highlights presentations by Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), SanDisk (Nasdaq: SNDK), First Solar (Nasdaq: FSLR), IBM (NYSE: IBM), Applied Materials (Nasdaq: AMAT), Dell (Nasdaq: DELL), Fairchild Semiconductor (NYSE: FCS). The Piper Jaffray Healthcare Conference (NYSE: PJC) hosts presentations by Baxter International (NYSE: BAX), St. Jude Medical (NYSE: STJ), Exelixis (Nasdaq: EXEL), Laboratory Corp. of America (NYSE: LH), Orthovita (Nasdaq: VITA), Quality Systems (Nasdaq: QSII), Ziopharm Oncology (Nasdaq: ZIOP), Abiomed (Nasdaq: ABMD), Celgene (Nasdaq: CELG), Pharmaceutical Product (Nasdaq: PPDI), Wright Medical (Nasdaq: WMGI), Cepheid (Nasdaq: CPHD), Hospira (NYSE: HSP), Isis (Nasdaq: ISIS), Neurocrine Biosciences (Nasdaq: NBIX), Arthrocare (Nasdaq: ARTC), Incyte (Nasdaq: INCY), Salix Pharmaceuticals (Nasdaq: SLXP), Alliance Healthcare (NYSE: AIQ), Alnylam Pharma (Nasdaq: ALNY), BioMarin Pharma (Nasdaq: BMRN), Cardica (Nasdaq: CRDC) and Covance (NYSE: CVD). There are several other conferences in session today at JP Morgan (NYSE: JPM), Citigroup (NYSE: C), Friedman Billings Ramsey, BB&T (NYSE: BBT), NYSSA, Canaccord Genuity, etc. This concludes today's business news review.

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Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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Jobless Claims Inspire Stocks

jobless claims inspire stocks
Better Than Turkey!

Wall Street Greek readers today enjoyed the punch line of an inside joke we've shared amongst ourselves. A couple months back, we scribbled on these ethereal pages that a nice new catalyst for stocks would be weekly jobless claims nearing 400K or falling under that mark. Today's Labor Department report noted claims at 407K, and stocks rallied sharply (Dow +1.4%), recovering from a bad outing Tuesday.


Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

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Jobless Claims Inspire Stocks



business columnistWhen Jobless Claims dropped under 450K over recent weeks, we noted the market's special enthusiasm expressed through stock buying activity. The action was right in line with our own expectations and calls for a bullish catalyst near the 400K level.

Having witnessed the stale state of labor affairs over the last year, we came to understand that investors were coming to grips with a new reality. Folks were learning to live with a lumbering economy, and they were not buying stocks anymore.

Heading into the November elections, and once it became clear in late August that the Tea Party Republicans were going to bring back balance to Congress and leave tax breaks in place, stocks trended higher. But since the elections, the market has lacked reason to rise. QE2 was supposed to provide a new catalyst, but equalizing currency drivers in Europe (Ireland) and Asia (Korea) sort of offset hopes for export opportunities. The race to the bottom for fiat currency has begun, but that is another tragedy we will discuss later. I realize there are still other benefits to reap from quantitative easing, but I just find the Fed's arsenal weak and see QE2 as the wrong gear for the war we are waging (look for our pending article on this as well).

What Had Happened...

For the week ended November 20, Initial Unemployment Insurance Claims tallied 407K, down 34K from the prior week's revised count of 441K. Many states commented that a shorter workweek may have aided the count, but Veterans' Day fell on November 11, which is outside of the measured period. The only other holiday was the Islamic Eid al-Adha, which is known to Christians and Jews as the day Abraham trusted in God and was willing to sacrifice his son Isaac. The Muslim Hajj also began during the week, and perhaps played some role.

So are Muslims such an important minority in the US now that Islamic holidays influence economic data? There is no accurate count of the number of Muslims in America, but it is estimated by reputable sources to be between 5 to 7 million (by US News & World Report and the Council on American-Islamic Relations).

That said, the recent data trail has offered us enough insight to determine that the cut in jobless claims has more to do with decreasing layoff activity than seasonal factors. After all, the four-week moving average declined another 7,500 in this latest period, to 436K.

The insured unemployment rate declined again, by another tenth of a point, to 3.3% in the November 13 period. 142,000 people fell out of the insured unemployed pool, leaving 4.182 million through November 13. The four-week moving average also fell here, to 4.309 million. The news is indisputably good, and so stocks had solid basis to react to it Wednesday. Continued improvement in this labor data point, should it occur, should prove a lasting catalyst for stocks as well. Perhaps we really do have something to be thankful for this Thanksgiving after all.

FYI

Extended benefits were available in Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, and Wisconsin, during the week ending Nov. 6.

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending Nov. 6 were in Puerto Rico (5.8 percent), Alaska (5.7), Oregon (4.3), Pennsylvania (4.0), California (3.9), Nevada (3.9), New Jersey (3.9), Arkansas (3.6), Connecticut (3.6), South Carolina (3.5), and Wisconsin (3.5).

unemployment forum message board chat

Article should interest investors in Paychex (Nasdaq: PAYX), Manpower (NYSE: MAN), Robert Half International (NYSE: RHI), 51Job Inc. (Nasdaq: JOBS), Monster World Wide (NYSE: MWW), Korn/Ferry International (NYSE: KFY), Administaff (NYSE: ASF), Kforce (Nasdaq: KFRC), TrueBlue (NYSE: TBI), Dice Holdings (NYSE: DHX), Kelly Services (Nasdaq: KELYA), SFN Group (NYSE: SFN), CDI Corp. (NYSE: CDI), Cross Country Healthcare (Nasdaq: CCRN), On Assignment (Nasdaq: ASGN), AMN Healthcare Services (NYSE: AHS), Barrett Business Services (Nasdaq: BBSI), Hudson Highland Group (Nasdaq: HHGP), StarTek (NYSE: SRT), RCM Technologies (Nasdaq: RCMT), VirtualScopics (Nasdaq: VSCP), American Surgical (OTC: ASRG.OB), Medical Connections (OTC: MCTH.OB), iGen Networks (OTC: IGEN.OB), St. Joseph (OTC: STJO.OB), General Employment Enterprises (NYSE: JOB), Total Neutraceutical (OTC: TNUS.OB), TeamStaff (Nasdaq: TSTF), Stratum (OTC: STTH.OB), Purespectrum (OTC: PSRU.OB), Corporate Resource Services (OTC: CRRS.OB), Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), J.P. Morgan Chase (NYSE: JPM), Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), Citigroup (NYSE: C), Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS), Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC), TD Bank (NYSE: TD), PNC Bank (NYSE: PNC), General Electric (NYSE: GE), Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT), McDonald's (NYSE: MCD), Alcoa (NYSE: AA), American Express (NYSE: AXP), Boeing (NYSE: BA), Caterpillar (NYSE: CAT), Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO), Chevron (NYSE: CVX), DuPont (NYSE: DD), Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS), Home Depot (NYSE: HD), Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), IBM (NYSE: IBM), Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ), Kraft (NYSE: KFT), Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO), 3M (NYSE: MMM), Merck (NYSE: MRK), Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT), Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG), AT&T (NYSE: T), Travelers (NYSE: TRV), United Technologies (NYSE: UTX), Verizon (NYSE: VZ), Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM). The day’s earnings included Deere (NYSE: DE), Tiffany (NYSE: TIF), China Cord Blood (NYSE: CO) and Frontline (NYSE: FRO).

Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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GDP Revised Higher for Third Quarter (Q3) 2010

GDP revision third quarter Q3
But Enthusiasm Tempered

Third quarter GDP got a hot revision higher today, up to 2.5%, from 2.0% when initially reported. The spurt beat economists' expectations too, which were set at 2.4%.


Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

(Relevant Tickers: NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, Nasdaq: NDAQ, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: SERAX, Nasdaq: SERBX, Nasdaq: SERCX, Nasdaq: SERNX, Nasdaq: FEUFX, Nasdaq: FEEEX, Nasdaq: FAEAX, Nasdaq: FBEAX, Nasdaq: FIEUX, Nasdaq: FECAX, Nasdaq: IERAX, Nasdaq: XRNEX, Nasdaq: PBEUX, Nasdaq: UEPIX, Nasdaq: UEPSX, Nasdaq: PEUGX, Nasdaq: RYAEX, NYSE: CEE, NYSE: RNE, NYSE: PEF, NYSE: GUR, NYSE: EPV, NYSE: VEA, NYSE: DFE, NYSE: DEB, NYSE: IEV, Nasdaq: ANEFX, Nasdaq: CNGAX, Nasdaq: HNEAX, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: GS, NYSE: AIG, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: MS, NYSE: C, NYSE: DB, NYSE: CS, NYSE: UBS, NYSE: FNM, NYSE: FRE, NYSE: MCG, NYSE: MCO, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: STD, AMEX: GLE, NYSE: BCS, NYSE: GLD, NYSE: XLE, NYSE: XLF, NYSE: BJV, NYSE: SZI, NYSE: BPD, NYSE: IEL, NYSE: PBN, NYSE: CGW, NYSE: LVL, NYSE: FRI, NYSE: PBP, NYSE: RSU, NYSE: RMM, NYSE: REA, NYSE: RFL, NYSE: RHM, NYSE: RTG, NYSE: RSW, NYSE: RMS, NYSE: REC, Nasdaq: PDOWX, Nasdaq: XDPOX, Nasdaq: XDPDX, Nasdaq: NDUAX, Nasdaq: NDUBX, Nasdaq: IDJAX, Nasdaq: NJCRX, Nasdaq: UDPIX, Nasdaq: UDPSX, Nasdaq: UWPIX, Nasdaq: RYLDX, Nasdaq: RYIDX, Nasdaq: RYCWX, Nasdaq: ONEQ, Nasdaq: QCLN, Nasdaq: QQEW, Nasdaq: QQXT, Nasdaq: QTEC, Nasdaq: NASDX, Nasdaq: NDXKX, Nasdaq: POTCX, Nasdaq: DXQSX, Nasdaq: DXQLX, Nasdaq: FNCMX, Nasdaq: INQAX, Nasdaq: MOTAX, Nasdaq: XQQQX)

GDP Revised Higher for Third Quarter (Q3)



Wall street economistAs expected by economists and reported here in our weekly copy published Monday, one driver of GDP adjustment higher was an upward revision to exports. However, running counter to economists' views, these gains were partly offset by a downward revision to private inventory investment.

The export gains should continue, aided by the Fed's quantitative easing affect on the dollar, at least for as long as that holds. European comments by the likes of Angela Merkel, calling into question the future of the euro recently, have helped to balance currency in favor of Europe's international traders. Meanwhile, uncertainty in a rich neighborhood in Asia, threatening South Korea, and kindling too near to Japan and China, also had the dollar gaining ground Tuesday.

Looking again at the factors involved in the +0.5% adjustment to GDP, the downward revision to private inventory investment is reflective of the end of inventory restocking and a stalling American marketplace. For as long as the US economy bears the weight of close to 10% unemployment and high-teen underemployment, you can expect that situation to hold true.

What economists had not expected nor mentioned as far as we could tell, was the upward adjustments to personal consumption expenditures and state and local government spending that were seen in today's data, which helped to lift GDP growth. The price factor within PCE was unchanged, and so it was the volume of spending that was shifted higher. That's good news, but its reliability moving forward is called into question given waning consumer sentiment.

Meanwhile, strengthened state and local government spending seems improbable, and incapable of being sustained in the tax-light environment that exists today. Federal government stimulus helped in the past, but we are not sure we can expect more of that with more fiscally conscious Congressmen making the calls in DC.

Also, business investment was a key driver of third quarter growth, and that seems set to stall on more recent trouble in housing, employment, and consumer sentiment and spending.

In conclusion, we do not feel completely comfortable with the message this GDP reports seems to transmit, given the mixed data reaching the wire over the past few weeks. An environment of soft American demand for goods and services seems more realistic moving forward given housing values slipping further and the pace of home sales staggered; with stocks reconsidering valuation post the pre-election driven gains; under intensified geopolitical stresses; and while still bearing the weight of heavy unemployment. Quantitative easing has been the government's ace card in its sleeve, but today's FOMC meeting minutes release revealed a somewhat split group of decision makers. Thus, the GDP revision was well-muted by the tandem of Korean conflict and Fed fighting.

Q3 GDP forum message board chat

Article should interest investors in: NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, Nasdaq: NDAQ, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: SERAX, Nasdaq: SERBX, Nasdaq: SERCX, Nasdaq: SERNX, Nasdaq: FEUFX, Nasdaq: FEEEX, Nasdaq: FAEAX, Nasdaq: FBEAX, Nasdaq: FIEUX, Nasdaq: FECAX, Nasdaq: IERAX, Nasdaq: XRNEX, Nasdaq: PBEUX, Nasdaq: UEPIX, Nasdaq: UEPSX, Nasdaq: PEUGX, Nasdaq: RYAEX, NYSE: CEE, NYSE: RNE, NYSE: PEF, NYSE: GUR, NYSE: EPV, NYSE: VEA, NYSE: DFE, NYSE: DEB, NYSE: IEV, Nasdaq: ANEFX, Nasdaq: CNGAX, Nasdaq: HNEAX, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: GS, NYSE: AIG, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: MS, NYSE: C, NYSE: DB, NYSE: CS, NYSE: UBS, NYSE: FNM, NYSE: FRE, NYSE: MCG, NYSE: MCO, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: STD, AMEX: GLE, NYSE: BCS, NYSE: GLD, NYSE: XLE, NYSE: XLF, NYSE: BJV, NYSE: SZI, NYSE: BPD, NYSE: IEL, NYSE: PBN, NYSE: CGW, NYSE: LVL, NYSE: FRI, NYSE: PBP, NYSE: RSU, NYSE: RMM, NYSE: REA, NYSE: RFL, NYSE: RHM, NYSE: RTG, NYSE: RSW, NYSE: RMS, NYSE: REC, Nasdaq: PDOWX, Nasdaq: XDPOX, Nasdaq: XDPDX, Nasdaq: NDUAX, Nasdaq: NDUBX, Nasdaq: IDJAX, Nasdaq: NJCRX, Nasdaq: UDPIX, Nasdaq: UDPSX, Nasdaq: UWPIX, Nasdaq: RYLDX, Nasdaq: RYIDX, Nasdaq: RYCWX, Nasdaq: ONEQ, Nasdaq: QCLN, Nasdaq: QQEW, Nasdaq: QQXT, Nasdaq: QTEC, Nasdaq: NASDX, Nasdaq: NDXKX, Nasdaq: POTCX, Nasdaq: DXQSX, Nasdaq: DXQLX, Nasdaq: FNCMX, Nasdaq: INQAX, Nasdaq: MOTAX, Nasdaq: XQQQX.

Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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Unemployment Claims Signal Labor Recovery, but Maybe Not Consumer Spending

unemployment claims signal labor recoverySomething is happening in the labor market, something good even. I'm still waiting to see if it is all a dream, the Giants winning the World Series, Republicans taking back the House, and the insured unemployed count the lowest it has been in two years. That said, without government intervention to extend benefits again, consumer spending could dive in the critical fourth quarter, labor recovery or not.

Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

(Relative Tickers: NYSE: RHI, NYSE: KFY, NYSE: MAN, NYSE: MWW, Nasdaq: KELYA, Nasdaq: JOBS, NYSE: JOB, Nasdaq: CECO, Nasdaq: PAYX, NYSE: ASF, Nasdaq: KFRC, NYSE: TBI, NYSE: DHX, NYSE: SFN, NYSE: CDI, Nasdaq: CCRN, Nasdaq: ASGN, NYSE: AHS, Nasdaq: BBSI, Nasdaq: HHGP, NYSE: SRT, Nasdaq: RCMT, Nasdaq: VSCP, OTC: ASRG.OB, OTC: MCTH.OB, OTC: IGEN.OB, OTC: STJO.OB, OTC: TNUS.OB, Nasdaq: TSTF, OTC: STTH.OB, OTC: PSRU.OB, OTC: CRRS.OB, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: JPM, NYSE: GS, NYSE: C, NYSE: MS, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: GE, NYSE: WMT, NYSE: MCD, NYSE: AA, NYSE: AXP, NYSE: BA, NYSE: CAT, Nasdaq: CSCO, NYSE: CVX, NYSE: DD, NYSE: DIS, NYSE: HD, NYSE: HPQ, NYSE: IBM, Nasdaq: INTC, NYSE: JNJ, NYSE: KFT, NYSE: KO, NYSE: MMM, NYSE: MRK, Nasdaq: MSFT, NYSE: PFE, NYSE: PG, NYSE: T, NYSE: TRV, NYSE: UTX, NYSE: VZ, NYSE: XOM, NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: NDAQ, NYSE: AIG, NYSE: WPO, NYSE: VTR, NYSE: CVH, NYSE: AMT, NYSE: AER, Nasdaq: AHPI, NYSE: ABR, NYSE: BZH, NYSE: BAM, Nasdaq: CADX, Nasdaq: CEDC, Nasdaq: DISH, NYSE: DRL, Nasdaq: ENSL, NYSE: FIG, NYSE: FCN, AMEX: HH, NYSE: IAG, NYSE: IEP, Nasdaq: LINTA, Nasdaq: NATH, Nasdaq: NVAX, Nasdaq: REVU, Nasdaq: RAND, Nasdaq: ROSE, NYSE: TSG, NYSE: SUP, NYSE: TTI, NYSE: TM, Nasdaq: YRCW, Nasdaq: CSCO, NYSE: M, NYSE: RL, NYSE: CSC, NYSE: ANW, AMEX: AIS, NYSE: AAP, OTC: AZSEY.PK, Nasdaq: CACH, NYSE: CEL, Nasdaq: CAGC, Nasdaq: CAGM, Nasdaq: CMFO, Nasdaq: CHME, Nasdaq: CSKI, Paris: ACA.PA, Nasdaq: EDGR, NYSE: AGM, NYSE: GSL, NYSE: ING, Nasdaq: KELYA, Nasdaq: KLIC, NYSE: MFB, Nasdaq: MRNA, NYSE: NNA, NYSE: PAL, NYSE: RST, Nasdaq: TBAC, NYSE: TGB, Nasdaq: TTEK, NYSE: XIN)

Unemployment Claims Signal Labor Recovery, but Maybe Not Consumer Spending



business columnistThis week's jobless data covering the period ended November 6 showed Weekly Initial Unemployment Claims dropped by 24K, to 435K, the lowest count in four months. Furthermore, the number of individuals receiving jobless benefits, at 4.301 million, was the lowest it has been in two years.

We cannot help but to be thrilled to report this good news, which following years of publishing warnings, feels surreal. Perhaps I am dreaming. Did the Giants really beat the Phillies and go on to win the World Series? Did the Republicans really just take back control of the House of Representatives just two years after leading the economy into near disintegration? Have I somehow slipped into a parallel universe, a bizarro world, where everything up is down and left is right? What's next, economic boom, runaway inflation and the ruination of fiat currency? Well, actually, I think yes on a couple of those. Sure glad I recommend gold ownership here a few years ago.

The latest week's unemployment insurance claims matched against the prior week's revised count of 459K. Claims have dipped below 450K before this latest dive, and each time it occurred it spurred stocks a bit. However, with claims unable to trend lower, the power of the news has been quickly lost to investors in the past. Still, perhaps what's brewing is opportunity for the real thing. Hold on though, before I get too giddy. We could be engaged in a wild war with Iran shortly, as commodity prices soar and terrorism threats convert into real attacks. Hey, barring that though, there's a chance for some more short-term profits in stocks.

We can see something happening very clearly in the four-week moving average, where initial jobless claims fell by 10K this week, to 446,500. Now that the moving average is short of 450K, it gets harder to not notice the change occurring. But perhaps it's just a matter of attrition.

Since this report measures first time filers for benefits, it cannot be attrition that is leading the data improvement. Rather, we are looking at the flow of newly unemployed into the jobless count. We all know what happens to a lake when the river flowing into it runs slower. This change in claims could help speed improvement in the unemployment pool, just by taking pressure off of it.

"...even if the unemployment rate improves on a lighter flow of newly jobless into the overall pool, consumer spending could still drop just as well."

Insured unemployment dipped another tenth of a percentage point, to 3.4% for the period ended October 30. That's good news, but let me issue another important warning, lest I be proclaimed an optimist! Uninsured unemployment is at risk of a dangerous shift higher in the near-term. Thus, even if the unemployment rate improves on a lighter flow of newly jobless into the overall pool, consumer spending could still drop just as well.

The problem is that funded unemployment insurance extensions are only in place until November 30. We assume the new Congress would not want to hamper the fourth quarter economy, which is critical for a broad segment of industries, including retail. So, while we normally would expect the government to seek to ease out of its extraordinary obligations, we hope that does not occur at this next critical juncture. Get us through Q4 Uncle Sam, and maybe we will be okay next year.

The total number of folks receiving some sort of unemployment benefit numbered a stunning 8.6 million as of October 23rd. Still, the total number of unemployed workers numbers closer to 15 million. Imagine that if the government does not extend unemployment insurance past November, somewhere around 2.3 million or so Americans will begin to lose their benefits. I base this number on the tally that existed in July, which has definitely changed some since, but probably not by much. These individuals will not be led off a cliff all at once though, however, they will be warned of the impending conclusion of their government aid. That knowledge alone will keep them from spending discretionary dollars as they prepare for the worst case scenario, unemployment without any income.

In conclusion, I expect the market will want to rally on further signs of employment gains, or less jobless flow, but if unemployment extensions find debate in Congress, that rally could be cut short or delayed until passage of favorable legislation. This would seem surely possible under the new fiscally conscious Republican Party leadership, but somehow I expect that post election actions might reflect differently then pre-voting rhetoric. At least I hope so with regard to employment insurance extensions, and let's not forget tax legislation.

FYI:

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending Oct. 23 were in Puerto Rico (6.1 percent), Alaska (5.2), California (4.1), Oregon (4.1), Pennsylvania (4.0), Nevada (3.9), New Jersey (3.9), Connecticut (3.6), Arkansas (3.5), South Carolina (3.5), and Wisconsin (3.5).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending Oct. 30 were in California (+6,387), Kentucky (+2,901), Wisconsin (+2,644), Oregon (+2,296), and Indiana (+1,920), while the largest decreases were in Florida (-3,450), South Carolina (-2,401), Illinois (-997), Georgia (-923), and Pennsylvania (-897).

unemployment forum message board chat

Article should interest investors in Paychex (Nasdaq: PAYX), Manpower (NYSE: MAN), Robert Half International (NYSE: RHI), 51Job Inc. (Nasdaq: JOBS), Monster World Wide (NYSE: MWW), Korn/Ferry International (NYSE: KFY), Administaff (NYSE: ASF), Kforce (Nasdaq: KFRC), TrueBlue (NYSE: TBI), Dice Holdings (NYSE: DHX), Kelly Services (Nasdaq: KELYA), SFN Group (NYSE: SFN), CDI Corp. (NYSE: CDI), Cross Country Healthcare (Nasdaq: CCRN), On Assignment (Nasdaq: ASGN), AMN Healthcare Services (NYSE: AHS), Barrett Business Services (Nasdaq: BBSI), Hudson Highland Group (Nasdaq: HHGP), StarTek (NYSE: SRT), RCM Technologies (Nasdaq: RCMT), VirtualScopics (Nasdaq: VSCP), American Surgical (OTC: ASRG.OB), Medical Connections (OTC: MCTH.OB), iGen Networks (OTC: IGEN.OB), St. Joseph (OTC: STJO.OB), General Employment Enterprises (NYSE: JOB), Total Neutraceutical (OTC: TNUS.OB), TeamStaff (Nasdaq: TSTF), Stratum (OTC: STTH.OB), Purespectrum (OTC: PSRU.OB), Corporate Resource Services (OTC: CRRS.OB), Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), J.P. Morgan Chase (NYSE: JPM), Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), Citigroup (NYSE: C), Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS), Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC), TD Bank (NYSE: TD), PNC Bank (NYSE: PNC), General Electric (NYSE: GE), Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT), McDonald's (NYSE: MCD), Alcoa (NYSE: AA), American Express (NYSE: AXP), Boeing (NYSE: BA), Caterpillar (NYSE: CAT), Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO), Chevron (NYSE: CVX), DuPont (NYSE: DD), Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS), Home Depot (NYSE: HD), Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), IBM (NYSE: IBM), Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ), Kraft (NYSE: KFT), Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO), 3M (NYSE: MMM), Merck (NYSE: MRK), Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT), Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG), AT&T (NYSE: T), Travelers (NYSE: TRV), United Technologies (NYSE: UTX), Verizon (NYSE: VZ), Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM).

Today's earnings schedule is highlighted by news from Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO), Macy's (NYSE: M), Polo Ralph Lauren (NYSE: RL), Computer Sciences (NYSE: CSC), Aegean Maritime Petroleum (NYSE: ANW), Antares Pharma (AMEX: AIS), Advance Auto Parts (NYSE: AAP), Allianz SE (OTC: AZSEY.PK), Cache (Nasdaq: CACH), Cellcom Israel (NYSE: CEL), China Agritech (Nasdaq: CAGC), China Green Material Tech (Nasdaq: CAGM), China Marine Food (Nasdaq: CMFO), China Medicine (Nasdaq: CHME), China Sky One Medical (Nasdaq: CSKI), Credit Agricole (Paris: ACA.PA), Edgar Online (Nasdaq: EDGR), Federal Agricultural Mortgage (NYSE: AGM), Global Ship Lease (NYSE: GSL), ING Groep (NYSE: ING), Kelly Services (Nasdaq: KELYA), Kullicke & Soffa (Nasdaq: KLIC), Maidenform Brands (NYSE: MFB), Marina Biotech (Nasdaq: MRNA), Navios Maritime Acquisition (NYSE: NNA), North American Palladium (NYSE: PAL), Rosetta Stone (NYSE: RST), Tandy Brands (Nasdaq: TBAC), Taseko Mines (NYSE: TGB), Tetra Tech (Nasdaq: TTEK), Xinyuan Real Estate (NYSE: XIN) and more.

Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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Employment Report Preview - October 2010

Employment Report Preview
Jobs Report Forecast

Over the course of the last two days we've received several employment data points that help us to form expectations heading into the Labor Department's Employment Situation Report, which is due Friday morning. Economists are looking for unemployment to stick at 9.6%, and nonfarm payrolls to increase by 60K when October's jobs data is reported. However, we think that a negative report would produce little threat to the trend of stocks in the near-term, which should tend higher. A positive data point, which is more likely as economic growth progresses, should only support stocks. The only threat is that this might all already be priced in, but we viewed today's nonaction by the ECB and BOE as catalyst for further market rise (see our other reports).


Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

(Relative Tickers: NYSE: RHI, NYSE: KFY, NYSE: MAN, NYSE: MWW, Nasdaq: KELYA, Nasdaq: JOBS, NYSE: JOB, Nasdaq: CECO, Nasdaq: PAYX, NYSE: ASF, Nasdaq: KFRC, NYSE: TBI, NYSE: DHX, NYSE: SFN, NYSE: CDI, Nasdaq: CCRN, Nasdaq: ASGN, NYSE: AHS, Nasdaq: BBSI, Nasdaq: HHGP, NYSE: SRT, Nasdaq: RCMT, Nasdaq: VSCP, OTC: ASRG.OB, OTC: MCTH.OB, OTC: IGEN.OB, OTC: STJO.OB, OTC: TNUS.OB, Nasdaq: TSTF, OTC: STTH.OB, OTC: PSRU.OB, OTC: CRRS.OB, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: JPM, NYSE: GS, NYSE: C, NYSE: MS, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: GE, NYSE: WMT, NYSE: MCD, NYSE: AA, NYSE: AXP, NYSE: BA, NYSE: CAT, Nasdaq: CSCO, NYSE: CVX, NYSE: DD, NYSE: DIS, NYSE: HD, NYSE: HPQ, NYSE: IBM, Nasdaq: INTC, NYSE: JNJ, NYSE: KFT, NYSE: KO, NYSE: MMM, NYSE: MRK, Nasdaq: MSFT, NYSE: PFE, NYSE: PG, NYSE: T, NYSE: TRV, NYSE: UTX, NYSE: VZ, NYSE: XOM, NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: NDAQ)

Employment Report Preview



business writerThis morning's economic releases offered a counter perspective to better data released yesterday. Investors have, therefore, been left confused. Fear not though dear readers, as none of it may matter now that QE2 has been set forth. Economists will likely discount any poor news tomorrow as a result, and so good news can only be supportive to the rally already begun two months ago on the shoulders of QE2 and Republican Congressional victory. Thus, we see little risk heading into Friday's release.

Unemployment Insurance Claims

Weekly Jobless Claims were reported Thursday for the week ended October 30, and as we noted earlier this morning in our premarket report, claims spiked back up above the 450K mark. At 457K, the news soured market hopes, lifted last week by the report noting claims had fallen to 437K (revised from 434K). Economists were looking for 443K this time around, but these weekly forecasts are usually useless, and we recommend you ignore them.

The four-week moving average for the weekly claims figure helps us find truer direction. This week's check on the average shows it increased by 2,000, to 456K. The insured unemployment rate, for the period ended October 23rd, dipped a tenth of a point to 3.4%. Some 42K less folks were receiving benefits as of the 23rd, but 4.34 million still were. Do not get too excited by the change in this count, as it leaves out more than two-thirds of the overall unemployed pool, which in September numbered 14.8 million. Furthermore, this excludes the "underemployed," or those folks working part-time jobs who would rather be working full-time, and also the disenchanted, who have given up hope altogether.

Not much changed in September or October as far as the weekly jobless numbers run, and so we cannot really look forward to much positive change in the Employment Report. Still, we can read modest positive into the outlook, given the declining number of insured unemployed. Keep in mind though, that laborers may simply be moving into part-time work, which would not change underemployment, nor would it impact consumer spending in a significant enough manner.

We regularly like to pass on the following data for your informational purposes and individual use:

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending Oct. 16 were in Puerto Rico (5.8 percent), Alaska (5.0), California (4.1), Oregon (4.1), Pennsylvania (4.1), New Jersey (3.9), Nevada (3.7), Connecticut (3.6), Wisconsin (3.6), Arkansas (3.5), and South Carolina (3.5).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending Oct. 23 were in California (+3,755), Illinois (+3,710), Pennsylvania (+2,256), Georgia (+1,593), and Michigan (+1,480), while the largest decreases were in Kentucky (-1,699), Florida (-1,615), Puerto Rico (-1,153), Indiana (-1,095), and Alabama (-1,087).

Monster Employment Index (MEI)

Monster World Wide (NYSE: MWW) reported on online job demand this morning, and the trend matched the message offered by several other data points recently. It was that same old "bouncing around the bottom," as the October MEI fell two points, to a reading of 136. The MEI sat at 136 as recently as August, but had run to as high as 141 in June. Though the reading slipped against September, it was still worlds apart from the environment that existed last year, when it stood at 120. The MEI reached its 12-month low of 114 in January of this year.

What does this all mean? Generally, it says the number of available positions found via online databases has slipped some, though not much. We would prefer to see more jobs available of course, but this data alone does not threaten new recession or higher unemployment. Neither does it offer hope for much improvement in the labor market. Remember, however, that employment is a lagging indicator. Though this time around, it is an anchor to economic recovery, causing significant drag and keeping V-shaped recovery from the probability equation completely. It is, therefore, acting as a leading indicator or obstacle.

During October, online job availability rose in 10 of the Index's 20 industry sectors and in eight of the 23 occupational categories monitored by Monster. That means it did not rise in the other 10 sectors and other 15 occupational categories. In fact, it may very well have fallen in those other sectors.

Monster reports that job demand improved in trade and related sectors. The most notable gains came in transportation and warehousing, as that business showed growth in job demand to its highest level of the year. This is probably a beneficiary of soft dollar policy and rising export demand.

The report indicates that online recruitment activity expanded for both the wholesale trade and retail trade sectors, and Monster notes that other consumer-driven groups, like accommodation and food services and arts, entertainment, and recreation, were relatively stable over the longer term.

It seems Monster sees or is trying to portray a better consumer mood and activity than we've generally seen represented in data, excluding today's Chain Store Sales which we've yet to review. It's common knowledge and general consensus that economic growth should persist, excluding the Iran event (which sure seems likely to occur before long). What we cannot read from here is whether solid traction is available below the mud we currently trudge through.

Monster reported, "Among occupations, year-over-year demand trends moved upward for legal and computer-related professionals, as exhibited by the annual growth in the broader information; and finance and insurance industries. Online job demand was relatively tempered for most other white-collar occupations."

I can see why legal opportunities have increased, given all the lawsuits filed against debt burdened Americans who cannot manage to pay their bills anymore. It is a shame how much pressure intensifies upon people already knocked to their knees, and the vipers and crows will find their true justice some other day for their hard-balling poor folks. I get the jobs in legal, but in finance? Really? Maybe corporate finance, but we have not seen any change in capital markets opportunities as yet.

Arizona recorded the highest annual increase in job opportunities as far as states go (boy could that real estate market use it too), while Portland and Boston looked hot for metropolitan regions. Washington D.C. was the only city to record an annual decrease in job opportunities. Hey, we thought all those House seats were simply turned over to new representatives. Bad news Charlie! Maybe they fired the guy who sweeps discrepancies under the rug. All in all, only 13 of the 28 metro markets measured saw increased job opportunities in October. State wise, the most job opportunities per capita existed in: Delaware, Alaska, Arizona, Vermont, Montana, Connecticut, Maryland, Rhode Island, Wyoming, and Virginia.

Challenger's Job-Cuts Report

Job cuts occur even when the economy is growing, and so this report is not likely to help much in forecasting labor market gains. However, it does offer some insight and even reason to cheer. In its latest report, Challenger noted October announced layoffs of 37,986. That compared with September's 37,151. More importantly, employers have declared 62% less layoffs this year-to-date, versus the comparable period from a year ago.

The most cuts last month came in the entertainment and leisure sector, as one should expect. Boardwalks are not as busy along the Northeast Coastline once Labor Day passes, and local amusement parks also see less traffic once school starts. Unfortunately, government and non-profit jobs have been going by the way side, and that continued last month (-4,749 cuts). This was the lowest such count since January though, but given stresses remaining on state and municipalities, and the dearth of coins for tin cans, this group should continue to struggle. Still, the pace of these cuts has improved, so perhaps the discrepancy sweeper can keep his job after all.

What we can take from all this is that perhaps we have hit rock bottom, or at least a safe plateau, as far as jobs go. We are operating at a point where few firings will occur barring new catalyst against economic activity. In other words, the bleeding has stopped, though partly because we almost ran out of blood.

ADP Private Employment Report

ADP's monthly data point comes closest to representing the change depicted in the following day's Labor Department report. ADP reported its estimate for private nonfarm payrolls for the month of October yesterday, and the news was moderately positive. According to ADP, private sector jobs likely increased on net by 43K in October. At first blush, that is not exciting news, but September's data showed a decline of 2K jobs, and that was revised from a drop of 39K.

It is not as if the trend in jobs has shown steady rise though. In fact, since the job market first showed improvement in February, this monthly report has offered readings ranging from a -2K to +65K. October's mark sits just off the average change since February, which is +34K.

In Conclusion

Given that the Labor Department report will finally be rid of the effect of the shedding of census workers and related large public sector cuts, we are almost guaranteed to see an increase in jobs Friday. In fact, economists forecast nonfarm payrolls increased by 60K last month, based on Bloomberg's survey. Economists' forecasts range from -2K to +97K, so just about nobody is looking for a dip in the labor market here. Unemployment is forecast to sit at 9.6%. There is no forecast for the Underemployment Rate, but we remind you that it deteriorated in September, to 17.1%, from 16.7% in August. We think there is a good chance it will moderate a bit here. So, with an hour left to trade, The Greek would be a buyer into any late day weakness that might come on fear of the Employment Report.

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Article should interest investors in Paychex (Nasdaq: PAYX), Manpower (NYSE: MAN), Robert Half International (NYSE: RHI), 51Job Inc. (Nasdaq: JOBS), Monster World Wide (NYSE: MWW), Korn/Ferry International (NYSE: KFY), Administaff (NYSE: ASF), Kforce (Nasdaq: KFRC), TrueBlue (NYSE: TBI), Dice Holdings (NYSE: DHX), Kelly Services (Nasdaq: KELYA), SFN Group (NYSE: SFN), CDI Corp. (NYSE: CDI), Cross Country Healthcare (Nasdaq: CCRN), On Assignment (Nasdaq: ASGN), AMN Healthcare Services (NYSE: AHS), Barrett Business Services (Nasdaq: BBSI), Hudson Highland Group (Nasdaq: HHGP), StarTek (NYSE: SRT), RCM Technologies (Nasdaq: RCMT), VirtualScopics (Nasdaq: VSCP), American Surgical (OTC: ASRG.OB), Medical Connections (OTC: MCTH.OB), iGen Networks (OTC: IGEN.OB), St. Joseph (OTC: STJO.OB), General Employment Enterprises (NYSE: JOB), Total Neutraceutical (OTC: TNUS.OB), TeamStaff (Nasdaq: TSTF), Stratum (OTC: STTH.OB), Purespectrum (OTC: PSRU.OB), Corporate Resource Services (OTC: CRRS.OB), Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), J.P. Morgan Chase (NYSE: JPM), Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), Citigroup (NYSE: C), Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS), Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC), TD Bank (NYSE: TD), PNC Bank (NYSE: PNC), General Electric (NYSE: GE), Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT), McDonald's (NYSE: MCD), Alcoa (NYSE: AA), American Express (NYSE: AXP), Boeing (NYSE: BA), Caterpillar (NYSE: CAT), Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO), Chevron (NYSE: CVX), DuPont (NYSE: DD), Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS), Home Depot (NYSE: HD), Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), IBM (NYSE: IBM), Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ), Kraft (NYSE: KFT), Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO), 3M (NYSE: MMM), Merck (NYSE: MRK), Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT), Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG), AT&T (NYSE: T), Travelers (NYSE: TRV), United Technologies (NYSE: UTX), Verizon (NYSE: VZ), Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM).

Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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Premarket Buzz 11-04-10

premarket buzz
Stock Market Preview
Greek Factor: +1


The day's premarket buzz highlights data on jobless claims, labor productivity, online job demand, monetary policy from the BOE and ECB and several pending reports and corporate earnings headliners. The "Greek Factor" ranges from +3 to -3, and is a subjective measure of The Greek's view of the market impact of individual and aggregate news and the day's scheduled events.


Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

(Tickers: NYSE: MWW, NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: NDAQ, Nasdaq: SBUX, NYSE: KFT, NYSE: AES, NYSE: WPI, NYSE: PCG, NYSE: PKI, NYSE: APA, NYSE: CVC, NYSE: CF, NYSE: DVA, NYSE: DTV, NYSE: FLR, NYSE: PCS, NYSE: PSA, NYSE: RSG, NYSE: SNI, NYSE: TSO, NYSE: TWC, Nasdaq: USPH, Nasdaq: XOMA, NYSE: UFI, Nasdaq: DYNV)

Premarket Buzz



The day's premarket buzz is born of yesterday's driver, QE2, and inaction this morning by the BOE and ECB. As the European banks often take their time in acting, this allows the Fed to get the desired result, or one of them, in a weakening dollar this month. The dollar has already weakened ahead of the QE2 policy statement, but it might have gained today if the ECB or BOE countered US Fed action. Thus, the increase in jobless claims is somewhat muted this morning, since we would look ahead to job gains and not expect them yet (or the Fed would). I'll have more to say about the impact of QE2 in the near future.

Jobless Claims

Weekly Jobless Claims were reported today, just one week removed from exciting the marketplace on a deep dip toward 400K. HOWEVER, this week’s data covering the period ended October 30 showed claims spiked back upward to 457K, versus economists' forecasts for 443K. Adding insult to injury, last week's sweet result was revised higher to 437K, up from 434K.

Monster Employment Index

Monster Worldwide (NYSE: MWW) reported its Monster Employment Index, a measure of online job demand, this morning. The MEI slipped two points in October, to 136, but was still better than last year's 120 mark. That was the basic message, better year-over-year data, but slippage against September, which is more important. During October, online job availability rose in 10 of the Index's 20 industry sectors and in eight of the 23 occupational categories monitored.

Productivity & Costs Report

The government reported on Productivity & Costs for the third quarter this morning. Nonfarm business sector labor productivity gained by a 1.9% annual rate in the quarter. Output increased by 3%, while hours worked rose by only 1.1%. Productivity increased 2.5% over the last four quarters, which is not a stellar drive out of the depths of this recession. As is usually the case, Unit Labor Costs moved in the opposite direction to productivity, which is of course a good thing for corporations and is expected. Unit labor costs in nonfarm businesses decreased 0.1 percent in the third quarter of 2010, because productivity grew 1.9 percent while hourly compensation increased 1.8 percent.

ECB & BOE Hold Steady

Both the Bank of England and the European Central Banks kept their rates steady and quantitative easing efforts unchanged, which should allow the dollar more room to depreciate. This also allows stocks more room to rise in the short-term.

Chain Store Sales

Individual retailers will report their sales from stores in place for a year or more today. This October figure precedes the start of the holiday season and follows the back-to-school driver, so it lacks perhaps in importance. That said, it still matters to traders today.

Natural Gas Report

The EIA reports on the state of natural gas inventory later this morning at 10:30 PM.

Corporate Wire

Reporting earnings today, look for data from Starbucks (Nasdaq: SBUX), Kraft (NYSE: KFT), The AES Corp. (NYSE: AES), Watson Pharmaceuticals (NYSE: WPI), PG&E (NYSE: PCG), PerkinElmer (NYSE: PKI), Apache (NYSE: APA), Cablevision (NYSE: CVC), CF Industries (NYSE: CF), DaVita (NYSE: DVA), DirecTV (NYSE: DTV), Fluor (NYSE: FLR), MetroPCS (NYSE: PCS), Public Storage (NYSE: PSA), Republic Services (NYSE: RSG), Scripps Networks (NYSE: SNI), Tesoro (NYSE: TSO), Time Warner Cable (NYSE: TWC), US Physical Therapy (Nasdaq: USPH) and XOMA (Nasdaq: XOMA). Look for splits from Unifi (NYSE: UFI) and Dynamic Ventures (Nasdaq: DYNV).

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Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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Hyperventilating About Q3 GDP?

Q3 GDP
Not Me! Over Dramatizing Maybe, but Not Hyper- ventilating

Your favorite old hyperventilating blogger has been quite busy lately, formulating the great idea that will save the economy. That said, we ran over on publishing this tally of Q3 GDP, that if you haven't seen yet, is worth your while.


Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

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Hyperventilating About Q3 GDP?



Real GDP was reported last week for the third quarter, but it came in as expected and offered neither reason to buy nor sell heading into this week's elections and Fed meeting. Gross Domestic Product increased 2.0% in Q3, right in line with the views of economists surveyed by Bloomberg, though up only slightly from the 1.7% growth reported in Q2. Now this was the "advance" estimate, and is subject to decent sized revision, given much of the determinant data has yet to be recorded.

The drivers of GDP growth were found in personal consumption expenditures (PCE), private inventory investment, nonresidential fixed investment, federal government spending, and exports; these factors were partly offset by a negative contribution from residential fixed investment. Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, increased.

In the recent past, we have been critical of our nation's economic drivers here, since they have been dominated by government stimulus and interest rate actions, and not by real and natural economic activity. This quarter we show consumption pickup to 2.6%, versus a rate of 2.2% in Q2. That was a good thing to see, but not steady nor sure.

Growth was driven by a gain in motor vehicle sales for one. Bloomberg's Tom Keene, whom I listen to each morning and appreciate much for his insight, delivery and especially his considerate character (never a negative tone or note from Tom), said autos are in stealth recovery (something like that). He is right, as motor vehicle output added 0.42 of a percentage point to the Q3 change, compared with a 0.06 subtraction to Q2 GDP. At the same time, I see auto sales still well short of pre-recession levels, and I am not sure I would be buying into GM's IPO just yet (let's see how they want to price it).

Durable Goods again were a positive for the economy, though the 6.1% increase in spending was less than Q2's 6.8% gain; the contribution to GDP was not as spectacular as this number implies either. Americans are not going to buy washing machines for homes just lost, nor will a jobless man afford one to replace the old clunker that still works.

The rate of increase in nondurable goods spending also softened, to +1.3%, short of the 1.9% increase in Q2. Thus, the quarter's warnings seen in consumer confidence figures and other data proved true to the bottom line. But the difference was made up for elsewhere.

Services dominate American production, and the line item improved to 2.5% growth, up from Q2's 1.6% increase. I wonder, however, how much benefit this got from the fraudulent foreclosure crusaders, who instead of helping troubled households, put them to the streets. Also, the census workers fit the services bill, but were captured in government spending contribution, which was significant this quarter. I know debt collectors are working hard busting the balls of the broken down, so maybe they made up some of the gain too. I guess it's better than joining the unemployment line, but the legal hawks are just ruthless characters, or so I hear.

The small acceleration in real GDP in the third quarter (+ three-tenths) primarily reflected a sharp deceleration in import growth and accelerations in private inventory investment and in PCE that were partly offset by a downturn in residential fixed investment and decelerations in nonresidential fixed investment and in exports (I know that's a run-on sentence, but it's right off the report - you don't need a GED to work for the government it seems). In any event, this mess of a sentence is not good news for you. If import growth is down, then Americans are buying less of even the cheap stuff.

Inventories keep rising (fastest since 1998), but as my favorite columnist, Barron's Alan Abelson noted, it is while final demand slumps (+0.6% last quarter). Perhaps we are stocking up just in time to put everything on special sale (read bankruptcy driven inventory unload). Are you Christmas shopping this year? Where from? How have things changed?

I hope I'm included in the group of "hyperventilating, wild-eyed bloggers…" Alan mentioned in his column this week (a must read; it makes the $5 spend for Barron's worthwhile on its own). Hey, I shared a few drinks with a Barron's scribe this weekend too, and a Golden Globe Award winner as well (I've uttered those words about a hundred times since). It just rolls off the tongue nicely. See my Facebook page for details and a photo soon, and join if you are not a "friend" yet.

I believe I need not harp on housing here again, given last week's overwhelming coverage of the sector. To summarize, it still sucks. The pace of growth in both exports and imports moderated, offering perhaps an omen for the global economic outlook. Barron's got it right though, the key to Q3 was the buildup in inventory, as it contributed 1.44 percentage points to the third quarter change. If this stuff they filled the warehouses with doesn't sell, then the economic factor will be removed in ugly fashion in the quarters ahead. Do you think ugly enough for recession?

While investment in equipment and software contributed 0.8 to GDP, that was down from a 1.52 percentage point contribution in Q2. You'll recall that not too long ago, every strategist hoping for a bonus was playing up the business investment numbers. However, we were attributing them to big cash on balance sheets and a need to replace aged equipment (just see our "Interesting Reads" section at the blog.

Most economists seem to agree with our view that economic demand is null and void, and many of us are also not expecting much from the remaining Fed arsenal (read QE2). It really is going to take innovative thinking to revive and restore the economy, but don't you worry, your loyal hyperventilating blogger is working on something of that sort to save us all (if anyone in DC will have a hear).

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(Article should interest: NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, Nasdaq: NDAQ, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: SERAX, Nasdaq: SERBX, Nasdaq: SERCX, Nasdaq: SERNX, Nasdaq: FEUFX, Nasdaq: FEEEX, Nasdaq: FAEAX, Nasdaq: FBEAX, Nasdaq: FIEUX, Nasdaq: FECAX, Nasdaq: IERAX, Nasdaq: XRNEX, Nasdaq: PBEUX, Nasdaq: UEPIX, Nasdaq: UEPSX, Nasdaq: PEUGX, Nasdaq: RYAEX, NYSE: CEE, NYSE: RNE, NYSE: PEF, NYSE: GUR, NYSE: EPV, NYSE: VEA, NYSE: DFE, NYSE: DEB, NYSE: IEV, Nasdaq: ANEFX, Nasdaq: CNGAX, Nasdaq: HNEAX, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: GS, NYSE: AIG, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: MS, NYSE: C, NYSE: DB, NYSE: CS, NYSE: UBS, NYSE: FNM, NYSE: FRE, NYSE: MCG, NYSE: MCO, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: STD, AMEX: GLE, NYSE: BCS, NYSE: GLD, NYSE: XLE, NYSE: XLF, NYSE: BJV, NYSE: SZI, NYSE: BPD, NYSE: IEL, NYSE: PBN, NYSE: CGW, NYSE: LVL, NYSE: FRI, NYSE: PBP, NYSE: RSU, NYSE: RMM, NYSE: REA, NYSE: RFL, NYSE: RHM, NYSE: RTG, NYSE: RSW, NYSE: RMS, NYSE: REC, Nasdaq: PDOWX, Nasdaq: XDPOX, Nasdaq: XDPDX, Nasdaq: NDUAX, Nasdaq: NDUBX, Nasdaq: IDJAX, Nasdaq: NJCRX, Nasdaq: UDPIX, Nasdaq: UDPSX, Nasdaq: UWPIX, Nasdaq: RYLDX, Nasdaq: RYIDX, Nasdaq: RYCWX, Nasdaq: ONEQ, Nasdaq: QCLN, Nasdaq: QQEW, Nasdaq: QQXT, Nasdaq: QTEC, Nasdaq: NASDX, Nasdaq: NDXKX, Nasdaq: POTCX, Nasdaq: DXQSX, Nasdaq: DXQLX, Nasdaq: FNCMX, Nasdaq: INQAX, Nasdaq: MOTAX, Nasdaq: XQQQX)

Please see our disclosures at the Wall Street Greek website and author bio pages found there. This article and website in no way offers or represents financial or investment advice. Information is provided for entertainment purposes only.

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Jobless Claims Show Anchored Unemployment

jobless claims show anchored unemployment
Just when we thought we might be catching a break, this unforgiving recession reminds us she is sticking around a while. Jobless claims had only just dipped below the psychologically important 450K mark, and offered hope of moving toward 400K. However, optimists were slapped in the face today by reality, as new benefits filers were reported higher last week. Or was it just the census crew coming in for their checks?

Our founder earned clients a 23% average annual return over five years as a stock analyst on Wall Street. "The Greek" has written for institutional newsletters, Businessweek, Real Money, Seeking Alpha and others, while also appearing across TV and radio. While writing for Wall Street Greek, Mr. Kaminis presciently warned of the financial crisis.

(Relative Tickers: NYSE: RHI, NYSE: KFY, NYSE: MAN, NYSE: MWW, Nasdaq: KELYA, Nasdaq: JOBS, NYSE: JOB, Nasdaq: CECO, Nasdaq: PAYX, NYSE: ASF, Nasdaq: KFRC, NYSE: TBI, NYSE: DHX, NYSE: SFN, NYSE: CDI, Nasdaq: CCRN, Nasdaq: ASGN, NYSE: AHS, Nasdaq: BBSI, Nasdaq: HHGP, NYSE: SRT, Nasdaq: RCMT, Nasdaq: VSCP, OTC: ASRG.OB, OTC: MCTH.OB, OTC: IGEN.OB, OTC: STJO.OB, OTC: TNUS.OB, Nasdaq: TSTF, OTC: STTH.OB, OTC: PSRU.OB, OTC: CRRS.OB, NYSE: BAC, NYSE: JPM, NYSE: GS, NYSE: C, NYSE: MS, NYSE: WFC, NYSE: TD, NYSE: PNC, NYSE: GE, NYSE: WMT, NYSE: MCD, NYSE: AA, NYSE: AXP, NYSE: BA, NYSE: CAT, Nasdaq: CSCO, NYSE: CVX, NYSE: DD, NYSE: DIS, NYSE: HD, NYSE: HPQ, NYSE: IBM, Nasdaq: INTC, NYSE: JNJ, NYSE: KFT, NYSE: KO, NYSE: MMM, NYSE: MRK, Nasdaq: MSFT, NYSE: PFE, NYSE: PG, NYSE: T, NYSE: TRV, NYSE: UTX, NYSE: VZ, NYSE: XOM, NYSE: DIA, NYSE: SPY, Nasdaq: QQQQ, NYSE: DOG, NYSE: SDS, NYSE: QLD, NYSE: NYX, NYSE: ICE, Nasdaq: NDAQ)

Jobless Claims Show Anchored Unemployment



labor market analystIf ever we saw an indicator of anchored unemployment, we did today. Weekly Jobless Claims for the week ended October 9 increased by 13,000, to 462K. The prior week’s result was also revised upwards, to 449K, from 445K. Economists were stymied, since they were looking for a reading of 443K. Heck, even we were duped into thinking things might finally be flattening out at least. Nope! Nada! We're still stuck in the mud, or rather, anchored.

This latest result broke a streak of six straight declines in the four-week moving average for claims, which increased by 2,250 in the latest period, to 459K. Still, we can take some comfort in the fact that the latest period's claims count was not far above the four-week average. Perhaps this will prove just a short-term dip, and it may be due to census workers, recently let go, finding their way to another type of government check.

The insured unemployment rate dipped a tenth of a point to 3.5% for the October 2 period, but that was only after the prior week was revised back up to 3.6%. In other words, if you're celebrating this, I'm sorry to tell you that it's the same news we partied about last week. Still, the insured unemployed count dipped by 112K in the October 2 period, which is good news, at least for those folks. Well, if they got a job it is anyway; if they died, that's another story…

FYI:

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending Sept. 25 were in Puerto Rico (6.3%), Alaska (4.5), California (4.0), Nevada (4.0), Oregon (4.0), Pennsylvania (4.0), New Jersey (3.9), Connecticut (3.6), Illinois (3.6), and South Carolina (3.5).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending Oct. 2 were in Pennsylvania (+2,869), New Jersey (+2,132), Georgia (+1,361), Indiana (+833), and Washington (+677), while the largest decreases were in California (-6,131), Florida (-5,357), Iowa (-817), Illinois (-746), and Puerto Rico (-578).

Extended benefits were available in Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, and Wisconsin during the week ending Sept. 25.

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Article should interest investors in Paychex (Nasdaq: PAYX), Manpower (NYSE: MAN), Robert Half International (NYSE: RHI), 51Job Inc. (Nasdaq: JOBS), Monster World Wide (NYSE: MWW), Korn/Ferry International (NYSE: KFY), Administaff (NYSE: ASF), Kforce (Nasdaq: KFRC), TrueBlue (NYSE: TBI), Dice Holdings (NYSE: DHX), Kelly Services (Nasdaq: KELYA), SFN Group (NYSE: SFN), CDI Corp. (NYSE: CDI), Cross Country Healthcare (Nasdaq: CCRN), On Assignment (Nasdaq: ASGN), AMN Healthcare Services (NYSE: AHS), Barrett Business Services (Nasdaq: BBSI), Hudson Highland Group (Nasdaq: HHGP), StarTek (NYSE: SRT), RCM Technologies (Nasdaq: RCMT), VirtualScopics (Nasdaq: VSCP), American Surgical (OTC: ASRG.OB), Medical Connections (OTC: MCTH.OB), iGen Networks (OTC: IGEN.OB), St. Joseph (OTC: STJO.OB), General Employment Enterprises (NYSE: JOB), Total Neutraceutical (OTC: TNUS.OB), TeamStaff (Nasdaq: TSTF), Stratum (OTC: STTH.OB), Purespectrum (OTC: PSRU.OB), Corporate Resource Services (OTC: CRRS.OB), Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), J.P. Morgan Chase (NYSE: JPM), Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), Citigroup (NYSE: C), Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS), Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC), TD Bank (NYSE: TD), PNC Bank (NYSE: PNC), General Electric (NYSE: GE), Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT), McDonald's (NYSE: MCD), Alcoa (NYSE: AA), American Express (NYSE: AXP), Boeing (NYSE: BA), Caterpillar (NYSE: CAT), Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO), Chevron (NYSE: CVX), DuPont (NYSE: DD), Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS), Home Depot (NYSE: HD), Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), IBM (NYSE: IBM), Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ), Kraft (NYSE: KFT), Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO), 3M (NYSE: MMM), Merck (NYSE: MRK), Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT), Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG), AT&T (NYSE: T), Travelers (NYSE: TRV), United Technologies (NYSE: UTX), Verizon (NYSE: VZ), Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM).

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