'in october'에 해당되는 글 2건

  1. 2008.12.06 U.S. Layoffs Surge in November by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2008.11.08 Retail sector loses 38,100 jobs in October by CEOinIRVINE

Government reported a much higher than expected 533,000 jobs evaporated, and the jobless rate reached 6.7%, from 6.5% in October.

In a worrisome sign of further weakening in the U.S. labor market, November saw the highest number of layoffs in the private sector in more than 32 years.

The Labor Department reported Friday that U.S. nonfarm payroll employment fell sharply in November, with 533,000 jobs lost. The unemployment rate rose to 6.7%, from an unrevised October figure of 6.5%. The prior October nonfarms payroll figure was revised to reflect a larger slide of 320,000, from the initially reported 240,000. Economists had been forecasting a substantially milder payrolls reduction of 350,000 jobs in November but a slightly higher 6.8% rate of joblessness. Employment declined in nearly all major industries, although health care continued to add jobs.

Equities recovered a bit at the markets' open, after plunging in response to the news during premarket trading. The Dow lost 0.7%, or 60 points, to 8,315; the S&P 500 fell 1.0%, or 9.2 points, to 836; and the Nasdaq tumbled 0.8%, or 13 points, to 1,432 during early trading. Bonds rallied, as investors fled to safe haven government debt. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury rose to 2.61%, from 2.55% late Thursday. The return on the two-year note also increased, to 0.83, from 0.82.

Since the start of the recession in December 2007, as recently announced by the National Bureau of Economic Research (see “Congratulations, It's A Recession”), the number of unemployed persons increased by 2.7 million, and the unemployment rate rose by 1.7 percentage points with two-thirds of these losses sustained in the last 3 months.

Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors, saw November's job losses as a sign that the economy is worsening at a faster than expected rate. "The labor market is in great trouble. Batten down the hatches because the ship is filling with water quick," he said. "The breadth of the job losses across industries is evidence that businesses all through the economy are reacting at the same time. We're seeing outsize job losses and will see more in the coming months because every business knows what's going on, and they're adjusting very rapidly."

The "outsize losses" are "the cost of technology," Naroff remarked, as instant access to information allows businesses of all sizes to react on a hair trigger to live economic data. However, he believes there is an upside: "The period of job losses may actually be shorter than in previous cycles as a result of the compression of the adjustment process where we all reacting at the same time."

The government also reported that wages rose 7 cents per hour, or 0.4%, in November. As unemployment continues to mount, it is likely that pay increases will be tempered in the months ahead.

The ADP Employer Services had a more coservative estimate of losses to the American job market Wednesday, when it reported that 250,000 jobs had disappeared during the month of November. (See “ADP Points Way Down On Payrolls Figures.") The Fed's Beige Book, which was released Wednesday, also reflected slumping economic activity. (See "Beige Book Bleak.")

Monday's official confirmation that the American economy has been contracting was not a huge surprise, considering the copious signs indicating a slowdown that had preceded it. Payroll employment has declined every month in 2008. Housing prices will have plunged an estimated 10.0% nationally this year, with more declines expected in 2009. U.S. gross domestic product first declined in the fourth quarter of 2008.

The confluence of worrying indicators has pushed consumer confidence to the steepest decline on record in October. This widespread pessimism has put the brakes on spending for everything from automobiles to holiday gifts, hurting businesses further. The competition for scarce dollars has lead to price cutting that some warn could point to a vicious deflationary cycle like that of the Great Depression, should a widespread drop in prices occur.




Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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The U.S. retail industry shed 38,100 jobs in October as merchants shuttered stores and scaled back sales help to respond to a dramatic drop in spending amid a worsening financial crisis.

That loss, marking the 11th consecutive month of retail job reductions, offers new evidence that the industry will be miserly with their hiring for what's expected to be the weakest holiday season in decades.

Overall, the nation's unemployment rate soared to a 14-year high of 6.5 percent in October as another 240,000 jobs were cut, according to data released by the Labor Department on Thursday. The figures offered more evidence of how the economy is deteriorating.

"It is a bleak season for retailers, and that is going to impact their hiring," said John Challenger, chief executive of Chicago-based outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

October's retail job losses were above the industry's average monthly pace of 30,000 reductions so far this year, according to Frank Badillo, senior economist at TNS Retail Forward.

Motor vehicle and parts dealers suffered the biggest losses, losing 21,400 job. But department stores and general merchandise stores were also hit; both categories lost about 18,000 jobs each. Food and beverage stores lost 6,200 jobs.

Challenger noted that holiday hiring will fall significantly below last year's total, which was the lowest since 2003. He's also seeing that more stores than last year are waiting to the last minute to cement their holiday hiring plans.

In fact, consumer electronics chain Best Buy Inc. said last month that it would hire fewer seasonal workers this year. The Minneapolis-based company said it anticipates hiring 16,000 to 20,000 employees for this holiday season, compared with the roughly 26,000 people it hired for the season last year. The company is also leaving the decision up to the stores as to how many staff to hire, rather than the corporation setting the staffing levels.

This year's holiday hiring levels are also being depressed by the rash of store closings and liquidations that have picked up in recent weeks.

On Monday, Circuit City Stores Inc. announced it was closing 155 of its more than 700 U.S. stores by Dec. 31. That translates to about 17 percent of its domestic work force, which could affect up to 7,300 people.

Specialty retailer Linens 'n Things, which filed for bankruptcy protection in May, announced liquidation sales at its stores last month after failing to find a buyer that wanted to operate the company. Regional department-store chain Mervyns LLC, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in July, said late last month that it's closing its remaining 149 stores and will hold going-out-of-businesses sales.

Meanwhile, toy maker Mattel Inc. said Thursday it's cutting about 1,000 positions worldwide because of the economic downturn. The company said the cuts will come from a combination of layoffs, attrition and retirements and will not affect holiday toy production

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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