Thursday, May 27, 2010
RBS analyst Bob Janjuah states his views
Bob Janjuah states that a massive turnaround in corporate behaviour in leverage, capex, investment, hiring and spending binge is extremely unlike for now and for the rest of this year.
This is a pretty honest assessment after all the rose colored glasses calls of a buoy hiring landscape for the staffing firms. However, premenant placement has barely budged from historical levels, and consumers continue to be selective on their purchasing behavior.
The U.S. also revised its GDP downwards to 3.0% rather than bullish estimates from firms such as Goldman Sachs of 3.7%. Besides that unemployment claims also missed estimates.
Monday, September 28, 2009
52% of Unemployment Benefits Expired
With the recent US government data from the source below over half of those that qualify for unemployment has there benefits expired. There continues to be significant weakness in the labour markets. Although, there has been a slight rebound in jobs lost jobs are not created at the level that leads to growth. Presently there are two million college educated graduates unable to attain jobs, let alone the countless numbers with experience and skills who continue to face grave job market conditions. Once this stimulus works itself through the system and does not create the types of sustainable job growth look for this economy to continue to trend down.
Source: http://ows.doleta.gov/unemploy/claimssum.asp
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Weekly Jobless Claims Down, Continuing Claims Rise
The Labor Department has come out with its weekly jobless claims, and we are current faced with a very weak market for job growth. Numbers were down 12,000 revised to 545,000. The consensus was 575,000, while the prior figure last week was 550,000 on an unrevised basis and went up to 557,000.
The four week average fell by 8,750 to 563,000. Continuing claims for the unemployed continues to rise, the figures rose by 129,000 to 6.23 million. The figures from the prior week would have rose even more if Labour Day wasn't present.
1 out of 10 are out of work on a official figure basis, while 1 out of 10 are either working part-time or under employed. Weekly jobless figures have to be down to 400,000 to see a healthy economy develop.
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Temp Hiring Falters Again
"Job losses in August were widespread, but Joe LaVorgna, chief U.S. chief economist at Deutsche Bank noticed concerning trends in temporary employment, as well as factory hours.
LaVorgna noted that while job cuts were spread through different segments of the economy, Temp hiring, a typical leading indicator of permanent hiring, dropped by 7,000 marking the 19th consecutive monthly decline.
For some time now the recovery has been expected to be led by business, as the U.S. consumer struggles with job security, diminished personal wealth and tight credit. Though the rate of job cuts is abating, the unemployment rate is expected to remain elevated through the first half of 2010. This is worrisome for Main Street, Wall Street and Washington as each have a keen interest in seeing Americans going back to work, off government benefits, and fully able to pay bills and consuming again."
Source: Forbes
Monday, August 10, 2009
Adecco post lost second quarter
Adecco’s net loss was 147 million euros ($208 million), as it took 246 million euros in charges for impaired goodwill and job cuts, the Glattbrugg, Switzerland-based company said in a statement today. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg had predicted net income of 32.8 million euros. Sales fell 31 percent to 3.6 billion euros in the quarter."
Source: Bloomberg
The numbers continue to be quite weak for the recruiting industry with no near term growth. Some pockets of strength and stablization, but that does not mean that growth is coming back. Especially, when many of these jobs are turning to in house recruiting.
Say for example the financial uptick in hiring. Although there is an uptick this does not mean that there is a continued longer term trend in hiring, just selective and longer term outlook for hiring.
Friday, August 7, 2009
Structural Unemployment Worsens.
The number of people who've been out of work longer than six months soared by a record 584,000 to 5 million, accounting for more than a third of all unemployment for the first time on record.
This is an interesting situation. The unemployment rate ticked down, but that is discounting a large number of job seekers removed from the overall data. This removed about .2% to the overall unemployment rate. So although there was slight improvement in job losses, there continues to be elavated state of job losses.
Another problem is the number of hours worked. The average reported on Thursday is 33.1, a tick up of 400,000+ jobs. However the United States is still running at very low historical hourly work rates. This will lead to reduced spending, and cause retailers to hire as few workers as needed. This continued slow pace of added jobs will limit the amount of hiring that the private sector will employ.
Jobs data propel staffing stocks, risks remain
Jobs associated with the physical supply chain will recover as inventories get run down and need to be restocked, Gilliam said, but he added:
"The only place we're seeing the reaction you'd expect there is in automotive, and what scares me is that's artificial. (The) cash-for-clunkers program accelerated demand in that segment."
Source: Reuters
Sunday, July 26, 2009
It Isn't Always a Job Behind an Online Job Posting

The problem of job postings that aren't what they seem is adding to the frustrations of the more than two million recently laid-off workers who are competing for an increasingly limited number of jobs. The good news is that there are several tip-offs that indicate an ad is likely to lead you down the wrong path. And as long as you don't give out any private data, getting duped into responding to a fruitless job ad will likely only cost you time and energy."
Source: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123483686491196353.html