Current:Home > MyUS jobless claims jump to 258,000, the most in more than a year. Analysts point to Hurricane Helene -WealthGrow Network
US jobless claims jump to 258,000, the most in more than a year. Analysts point to Hurricane Helene
View
Date:2025-04-17 14:27:22
The number of Americans filing for for unemployment benefits last week jumped to their highest level in a year, which analysts are saying is more likely a result of Hurricane Helene than a broader softening in the labor market.
The Labor Department reported Thursday that applications for jobless claims jumped by by 33,000 to 258,000 for the week of Oct. 3. That’s the most since Aug. 5, 2023 and well above the 229,000 analysts were expecting.
Analysts highlighted big jumps in jobless benefit applications across states that were most affected by Hurricane Helene last week, including Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee.
Applications for jobless benefits are widely considered representative of U.S. layoffs in a given week, however they can be volatile and prone to revision.
The four-week average of claims, which evens out some of that weekly volatility, rose by 6,750 to 231,000.
The total number of Americans collecting jobless benefits rose by 42,000 to about 1.86 million for the week of Sept. 28, the most since late July.
Some recent labor market data has suggested that high interest rates may finally be taking a toll on the labor market.
In response to weakening employment data and receding consumer prices, the Federal Reserve last month cut its benchmark interest rate by a half of a percentage point as the central bank shifts its focus from taming inflation toward supporting the job market. The Fed’s goal is to achieve a rare “soft landing,” whereby it brings down inflation without causing a recession.
It was the Fed’s first rate cut in four years after a series of rate hikes in 2022 and 2023 pushed the federal funds rate to a two-decade high of 5.3%.
Inflation has retreated steadily, approaching the Fed’s 2% target and leading Chair Jerome Powell to declare recently that it was largely under control.
In a separate report Thursday, the government reported that U.S. inflation reached its lowest point since February 2021.
During the first four months of 2024, applications for jobless benefits averaged just 213,000 a week before rising in May. They hit 250,000 in late July, supporting the notion that high interest rates were finally cooling a red-hot U.S. job market.
In August, the Labor Department reported that the U.S. economy added 818,000 fewer jobs from April 2023 through March this year than were originally reported. The revised total was also considered evidence that the job market has been slowing steadily, compelling the Fed to start cutting interest rates.
Despite of all the signs of labor market slowing, America’s employers added a surprisingly strong 254,000 jobs in September, easing some concerns about a weakening job market and suggesting that the pace of hiring is still solid enough to support a growing economy.
Last month’s gain was far more than economists had expected, and it was up sharply from the 159,000 jobs that were added in August. After rising for most of 2024, the unemployment rate dropped for a second straight month, from 4.2% in August to 4.1% in September,
veryGood! (52518)
Related
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- 'Rare and precious': Watch endangered emperor penguin hatch at SeaWorld San Diego
- Winners and losers of college football's Week 9: Kansas rises up to knock down Oklahoma
- Halloween performs a neat trick, and it's not just about the treats
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Thank you, Taylor Swift, for helping me dominate my fantasy football league
- Matthew Perry, Emmy-nominated ‘Friends’ star, has died at 54, reports say
- White House state dinner for Australia strikes measured tone in nod to Israel-Hamas war
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Rescuers search for missing migrants off Sicilian beach after a shipwreck kills at least 5
Ranking
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- 'Snow White' first look: Disney reveals Rachel Zegler as live-action princess, delays film
- It's been one year since Elon Musk bought Twitter. Now called X, the service has lost advertisers and users.
- AP Top 25: Oklahoma slips to No. 10; Kansas, K-State enter poll; No. 1 UGA and top 5 hold steady
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- 4 people, including 2 students, shot near Atlanta college campus
- An Alabama Coal Plant Once Again Nabs the Dubious Title of the Nation’s Worst Greenhouse Gas Polluter
- Magnitude 3.7 earthquake shakes San Francisco region, causes no damage
Recommendation
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
MLB to vote on Oakland A's relocation to Las Vegas next month
China’s foreign minister says Xi-Biden meeting in San Francisco would not be ‘smooth-sailing’
'Friends' star Matthew Perry dies at age 54, reports say
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
Jagger watches Barcelona wear Stones logo in ‘clasico’ but Beatles fan Bellingham gets Madrid winner
Parents of Liverpool's Luis Díaz kidnapped in Colombia
Shooting kills 2 and injures 18 victims in Florida street with hundreds of people nearby