Estimates show U.S. jobless claims fell to around 215,000 last week
according to the analysis of the non-seasonally adjusted state-level initial claims data released during the US government shutdown, the number of initial claims for unemployment benefits in the US dropped last week. According to Bloomberg's analysis of the data, as of the week ending October 11, the number of initial claims was about 215,000, lower than the estimated 234,000 from the previous week. Due to the government shutdown, the US Department of Labor has not released weekly unemployment reports since September 25, but still provided downloadable data for most states. This estimate used the pre-released seasonal adjustment factors from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to adjust the raw data. When data from all states is complete, this method is highly consistent with official seasonally adjusted data. However, the latest weekly data for Arizona, Massachusetts, Nevada, and Tennessee is missing, replaced by the average of the previous four weeks. Calculations show that as of the week ending October 4, the continued claims rose slightly to 1.93 million, higher than the estimated 1.92 million from the previous week.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Bitcoin, altcoins sell-off as Fed chair switch-up, AI bubble fears spook markets
From yen rate hikes to mining farms shutting down, why is bitcoin still falling?
The recent decline in bitcoin prices is primarily driven by expectations of a rate hike by the Bank of Japan, uncertainty regarding the US Federal Reserve's rate cut trajectory, and systemic de-risking by market participants. Japan's potential rate hike may trigger the unwinding of global arbitrage trades, leading to a sell-off in risk assets. At the same time, increased uncertainty over US rate cuts has intensified market volatility. In addition, selling by long-term holders, miners, and market makers has further amplified the price drop. Summary generated by Mars AI This summary was generated by the Mars AI model, and the accuracy and completeness of its content are still being iteratively updated.

The Economist: The Real Threat of Cryptocurrency to Traditional Banks
The crypto industry is replacing Wall Street's privileged status within the American right-wing camp.

Grayscale's Top 10 Crypto Predictions: Key Trends for 2026 You Can't Miss
The market is transitioning from an emotion-driven cycle of speculation to a phase of structural differentiation driven by regulatory channels, long-term capital, and fundamental-based pricing.

