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US Continuing Jobless Claims Fall to 1.805 Million, Beating Expectations and Highlighting Employment Resilience

2026-07-17

The newly released US continuing jobless claims for Q3 2026 (for the week ending July 4) fell to 1,805,000. This figure is not only a decrease of 9,000 from the previous 1,814,000, but also significantly lower than the market consensus expectation of 1.82 million. This decline suggests that the pace at which the unemployed are returning to the labor market has accelerated, and overall employment conditions remain resilient.

Looking at other related indicators, the robustness of the labor market is not only reflected in lagging indicators. According to the latest supplementary data, initial jobless claims for the week ending July 11 also simultaneously dropped to 208,000, setting a new low for the past two months. The downward trend in both these figures reflects that companies have not embarked on large-scale layoffs.

Regarding the reasons for the data decline, analysts at Oxford Economics pointed out that it can be partially attributed to the smaller scale of auto plant retooling this summer. Additionally, foreign media analysis suggests that this perfectly aligns with the current corporate strategy of "slow hire, slow fire." Amidst ongoing noise regarding the economic outlook, companies are inclined to retain their existing employees, thereby curbing the rise in the number of unemployed.

In the short term (1-2 months), stable employment data helps support US consumption momentum, alleviating immediate market concerns about an economic hard landing. However, in the medium term (3-6 months), the better-than-expected employment performance will give the Federal Reserve (Fed) more confidence to maintain a cautious monetary policy stance. Investors need to be aware of the repricing risks to the stock and bond markets that may arise from dashed expectations of rate cuts.

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