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US Jobless Claims Jump, Trade Deficit Shrinks: What the Latest Data Shows

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The latest US economic data shows a mixed picture. Jobless claims rose sharply, the trade deficit narrowed unexpectedly, and Treasury yields held lower after the reports.

US Jobless Claims Rise the Most Since 2020

Initial jobless claims in the US jumped by 44,000 to 236,000 for the week ending December 6. This is the biggest weekly increase since March 2020.

Economists say jobless claims often move sharply around holidays. However, the recent rise also comes at a time when several large companies – including PepsiCo and HP – have announced layoffs. Nationwide layoffs are at the highest level since early 2023, adding more weight to this jump in claims.

US Trade Deficit Shrinks to Smallest Level Since 2020

The US trade deficit narrowed sharply to $52.8 billion in September. This is the smallest deficit since mid-2020.

Exports rose by 3%, reaching the second-highest level ever recorded. The increase came mainly from shipments of non-monetary gold and pharmaceutical products. Imports grew by 0.6%.

This improvement in the trade balance may change the final estimate of US GDP for the third quarter. Before the report, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model expected net exports to add 0.86 percentage point to growth.

Treasury Yields Hold Lower After Data

US Treasury yields stayed lower after the release of the jobless claims and trade data. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note was last down 2.9 basis points at 4.135%.

Lower yields generally suggest that investors expect slower economic momentum or a softer labor market ahead.

What This Means for the US Economy

  • The rise in jobless claims could signal early stress in the labor market.
  • The smaller trade deficit may support stronger GDP numbers for Q3.
  • Falling Treasury yields show market expectations of cooler economic growth or possible future rate cuts.

Overall, the latest data suggests the US economy is still growing, but job market pressures may be starting to emerge.

 

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