
Challenger Layoffs Back Up
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
Summary
Announced job cuts in August, reported by Challenger, Grey & Christmas, reversed nearly all of a whopping July decline. The 28,100 increase to 65,278 pulled the three month moving average up 7.3% but it was still 40.4% than last year. [...]
Announced job cuts in August, reported by Challenger, Grey & Christmas, reversed nearly all of a whopping July decline. The 28,100 increase to 65,278 pulled the three month moving average up 7.3% but it was still 40.4% than last year.
During the last ten years there has been an 83% (inverse) correlation between the three month moving average level of announced job cuts and the three month change payroll employment.
Layoffs rose sharply m/m in the automotive (83.9% y/y), consumer goods (42.2% y/y), electronics (-72.9% y/y), and retail (107.0 % y/y) industries but fell in financial (-21.3% y/y), services (-73.3% y/y) and telecommunications (-77.3% y/y).
Job cut announcements differ from layoffs. Many are achieved through attrition, early retirement or just never occur.
Challenger also reported that announced hiring plans dropped sharply m/m (-73.6% y/y).
Remarks by Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke in South Carolina on Friday can be found here.
Challenger, Gray & Christmas | August | July | Y/Y | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Announced Job Cuts | 65,278 | 37,178 | -7.5% | 1,072,054 | 1,039,935 | 1,236,426 |
Tom Moeller
AuthorMore in Author Profile »Prior to joining Haver Analytics in 2000, Mr. Moeller worked as the Economist at Chancellor Capital Management from 1985 to 1999. There, he developed comprehensive economic forecasts and interpreted economic data for equity and fixed income portfolio managers. Also at Chancellor, Mr. Moeller worked as an equity analyst and was responsible for researching and rating companies in the economically sensitive automobile and housing industries for investment in Chancellor’s equity portfolio. Prior to joining Chancellor, Mr. Moeller was an Economist at Citibank from 1979 to 1984. He also analyzed pricing behavior in the metals industry for the Council on Wage and Price Stability in Washington, D.C. In 1999, Mr. Moeller received the award for most accurate forecast from the Forecasters' Club of New York. From 1990 to 1992 he was President of the New York Association for Business Economists. Mr. Moeller earned an M.B.A. in Finance from Fordham University, where he graduated in 1987. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Economics from George Washington University.