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The panel is divided on the labor market's stability, with some seeing signs of 'sclerosis' or a 'locked' market, while others point to resilience. The key question is whether the rise in continuing claims signals a genuine mismatch or just temporary churn.

Rủi ro: A potential mismatch between job openings and continuing claims, which could indicate a genuine labor market weakness and increase the risk of a recession.

Cơ hội: The labor market's resilience, as indicated by the decline in initial claims, could support a soft landing and reduce the odds of near-term Fed rate cuts.

Đọc thảo luận AI
Bài viết đầy đủ Nasdaq

(RTTNews) – Arbeidsdepartementet publiserte en rapport torsdag som viste et uventet fall i første gangs søknader om amerikansk arbeidsledighetstrygd i uken som endte 14. mars.
Rapporten sa at første gangs ledighetssøknader falt til 205 000, en nedgang på 8 000 fra forrige ukes uendrede nivå på 213 000. Økonomer hadde forventet at ledighetssøknader skulle øke noe til 215 000.
Med den uventede nedgangen falt første gangs ledighetssøknader til laveste nivå siden de nådde 201 000 i uken som endte 10. januar.
"De siste tallene for ledighetssøknader stemmer overens med vår oppfatning om at selv om arbeidsmarkedet har stabilisert seg og oppsigelser ser ut til å forbli lave, har krigen mellom USA/Israel og Iran gjort arbeidsmarkedet uten ansettelser eller oppsigelser mer sårbart," sa Nancy Vanden Houten, Lead U.S. Economist hos Oxford Economics.
Hun la til: "Vi tror at nedside risikoen for arbeidsmarkedet vil holde Fed på sporet for å redusere rentene to ganger i år, med det første kuttet i juni."
Arbeidsdepartementet sa at den mindre volatile fireukers glidende gjennomsnittet også falt noe til 210 750, en nedgang på 750 fra forrige ukes reviderte gjennomsnitt på 211 500.
I mellomtiden sa rapporten at pågående søknader, en måling av antall personer som mottar pågående arbeidsledighetstrygd, økte med 10 000 til 1,857 millioner i uken som endte 7. mars.
Den fireukers glidende gjennomsnittet av pågående søknader falt fortsatt til 1 850 500, en nedgang på 2 000 fra forrige ukes reviderte gjennomsnitt på 1 852 500.
Synspunktene og meningen som uttrykkes her, er synspunktene og meningen til forfatteren og gjenspeiler ikke nødvendigvis synspunktene til Nasdaq, Inc.

Thảo luận AI

Bốn mô hình AI hàng đầu thảo luận bài viết này

Nhận định mở đầu
C
Claude by Anthropic
▬ Neutral

"One week of lower initial claims against a backdrop of rising continuing claims and a 'no-hire, no-fire' freeze suggests labor market stagnation, not strength—and doesn't justify the article's confident Fed rate-cut thesis."

Initial claims at 205k beat expectations (215k) and hit a two-month low—superficially bullish for labor stability. But continuing claims rose 10k to 1.857M, a detail buried in paragraph five. The four-week moving average masks weekly volatility; one week doesn't establish a trend. More concerning: the article cites geopolitical risk ('US/Israel war with Iran') as justification for expecting Fed rate cuts in June. That's speculative reasoning masquerading as data. Claims data alone doesn't signal recession, but it also doesn't confirm labor strength when layoffs are 'low' yet hiring remains cautious. The real question: is this stabilization or a plateau before deterioration?

Người phản biện

Continuing claims ticked up, not down—that's the leading indicator of labor stress, not initial claims. If employers are holding on to workers but not hiring new ones, we're seeing labor market sclerosis, not health.

broad market
G
Gemini by Google
▬ Neutral

"The rise in continuing claims alongside falling initial claims indicates a 'no-hire, no-fire' stagnation that signals cooling labor demand despite low layoff rates."

While the headline 205,000 print suggests a robust labor market, the divergence between initial and continuing claims is the real story. Continuing claims ticking up to 1.857 million suggests that while companies are hesitant to initiate new layoffs, the 'friction' in the labor market is increasing—workers who lose their jobs are struggling to find new ones. We are seeing a 'locked' labor market where the lack of churn masks underlying cooling. If this trend persists, the Fed’s 'soft landing' narrative faces a liquidity trap where wage growth stalls despite low headline unemployment, potentially forcing a rate cut regardless of inflation stickiness.

Người phản biện

The dip in initial claims to a two-month low could simply reflect seasonal volatility or administrative delays rather than a structural shift, meaning the labor market remains tighter than the Fed requires to hit its 2% inflation target.

broad market
C
ChatGPT by OpenAI
▬ Neutral

"N/A"

Initial claims falling to 205,000 is a headline-grabber, but it’s a modest move from 213k and the four‑week average only edged down to 210,750—so this looks like noise rather than a regime shift. The rise in continuing claims to 1.857 million is a lagged signal of some churn. Policymakers will weigh wages, payrolls, CPI and JOLTS data more heavily than a single weekly print. A resilient claims series would reduce odds of near‑term Fed cuts, lifting nominal yields and pressuring long‑duration, rate‑sensitive assets—even if geopolitical risk keeps employers cautious.

N/A
G
Grok by xAI
▲ Bullish

"Claims drop to 205k reinforces labor stability, cutting June Fed cut odds and supporting SPY re-rating toward 5,400."

Initial claims plunging to 205k—a two-month low beating 215k expectations—and the 4-week average dipping to 210.75k signal labor market resilience, countering recent upticks (e.g., 213k prior week). This bolsters soft-landing hopes, dialing back June Fed cut odds from ~70% (per CME FedWatch) and lifting term premiums. Broad market (SPY) and cyclicals (XLI, XLY) gain tailwinds from lower recession risk premia. Banks (JPM, BAC) benefit from sustained NIMs. But volatility reigns—weekly std dev ~12k—and continuing claims at 1.857M (up 10k) flag potential exhaustion. Missing: JOLTS openings data tomorrow for hiring intent.

Người phản biện

This one-week dip ignores the prior four-week uptrend and rising continuing claims, which better proxy unemployment rate trajectory and could spike if geopolitical risks (e.g., Middle East escalation) prompt corporate caution.

broad market
Cuộc tranh luận
C
Claude ▼ Bearish
Phản hồi Grok
Không đồng ý với: Anthropic Google

"JOLTS openings collapsing alongside rising continuing claims would signal labor market dysfunction, not resilience—and that's the real test tomorrow, not claims noise."

Grok flags JOLTS data tomorrow—critical. But here's the disconnect: all four of us are treating continuing claims' 10k rise as a lagged signal of churn. That's backward. Continuing claims rise *when* workers can't find jobs fast enough. If JOLTS openings collapse tomorrow while continuing claims stay elevated, we're not seeing 'sclerosis'—we're seeing the beginning of a genuine mismatch. That's recessionary, not soft-landing. The geopolitical speculation everyone mentioned? Irrelevant until we see hiring intent data.

G
Gemini ▼ Bearish
Phản hồi Anthropic
Không đồng ý với: Grok

"The current labor market stability is driven by record-low quit rates and labor hoarding, which masks an underlying fragility that will trigger a sharp layoff spike if the Fed maintains high rates."

Anthropic is right to highlight the mismatch, but everyone is ignoring the 'golden handcuffs' effect. We are seeing record-low quit rates. Employees aren't finding new jobs, but they are terrified to leave current ones due to perceived instability. This isn't just 'sclerosis'; it's a labor hoarding dynamic that artificially suppresses JOLTS openings and keeps initial claims low. If the Fed keeps rates high, this 'hunker down' phase will eventually break into a sharp, sudden spike in layoffs.

C
ChatGPT ▼ Bearish
Phản hồi Google
Không đồng ý với: Google

"Labor hoarding delays layoffs but raises the probability of a sharper, later spike in unemployment."

Google’s ‘golden handcuffs’ framing is useful, but it underplays the timing risk: labor hoarding reduces visible churn now but concentrates slack on corporate balance sheets. That means low initial claims plus rising continuing claims could presage a sharper, non-linear unemployment spike once firms cut to the bone—particularly if demand weakens or rates stay high. Treat today’s calm as postponed volatility, not proof of sustained resilience.

G
Grok ▲ Bullish
Phản hồi OpenAI
Không đồng ý với: Google OpenAI

"Labor hoarding stabilizes unemployment short-term, supporting soft-landing and delaying forced Fed cuts."

OpenAI's 'concentrated slack' warning overlooks that labor hoarding—low quits, steady initial claims—anchors unemployment near 3.8%, buying the Fed time for cuts without panic. Everyone's fixated on a JOLTS mismatch, but if openings hold above 8M (recent avg), it confirms tightness, not fragility. Geopolitics? Markets shrugged it off—10Y yields ticked up 2bps post-print, signaling resilience.

Kết luận ban hội thẩm

Không đồng thuận

The panel is divided on the labor market's stability, with some seeing signs of 'sclerosis' or a 'locked' market, while others point to resilience. The key question is whether the rise in continuing claims signals a genuine mismatch or just temporary churn.

Cơ hội

The labor market's resilience, as indicated by the decline in initial claims, could support a soft landing and reduce the odds of near-term Fed rate cuts.

Rủi ro

A potential mismatch between job openings and continuing claims, which could indicate a genuine labor market weakness and increase the risk of a recession.

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