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US Initial Jobless Claims Rise to 229,000, Exceeding Expectations and Hitting a Four-Month High

2026-06-12

The number of US initial jobless claims unexpectedly climbed in the latest week (ending June 6, 2026, part of Q2 2026), increasing from 225,000 in the previous week to 229,000. This latest figure not only exceeded the market consensus estimate of 219,000 to 220,000 but also marked a new single-week high since February of this year, indicating that the labor market has begun to show some signs of fatigue after a period of resilience.

Observing the key details, the underlying trend of the data also shows a cooldown. The four-week moving average, which is used to smooth out single-week volatility, increased by 4,250 to 219,000 this week, marking the third consecutive week of an upward trend for this indicator. Furthermore, the number of continuing jobless claims simultaneously rose to 1.795 million, reflecting that once workers lose their jobs, the time and difficulty required to find a new position are increasing.

Institutions such as Bloomberg pointed out that the jump in the data this time can be partly attributed to short-term seasonal fluctuations, such as delayed applications following the Memorial Day holiday and the impact of the beginning of school summer vacations. On the other hand, the effect of the tech industry recently cutting white-collar jobs due to artificial intelligence (AI) transformation is also gradually taking hold. Although corporate severance pay delayed the application schedule for some unemployment benefits, overall labor demand has shown signs of loosening under economic headwinds brought by geopolitics, such as the Middle East conflict.

Looking ahead, it is necessary to closely monitor data performance after seasonal factors fade in the short term of 1-2 months; if initial claims consistently stay above 230,000, it will further confirm the trend of a slowing labor market. In the medium term of 3-6 months, the cooling of the labor market actually provides breathing room for the Federal Reserve (Fed) to adjust monetary policy. If subsequent inflation data decline synchronously, it will significantly increase the probability of an interest rate cut in the second half of the year, which is expected to provide liquidity support for the stock market while bringing downward pressure on the US dollar and Treasury yields.

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