Jobless claims, goods orders signal modest rebound

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A fitful economic recovery is drawing strength from a stabilizing job market and signs that manufacturing will contribute
to the rebound. The evidence signals a better-than-expected end to the year, though doubts remain about growth in 2010.

The latest signs of improvement came in two reports Thursday. The Labor Department said the number of newly laid-off
workers filing claims for unemployment aid fell more than expected last week. The four-week average for claims, which smooths
out fluctuations, fell for the 16th straight week, to its lowest point since September 2008, when the financial crisis hit
with full force.

Further evidence of a gradually healing economy was a Commerce Department report that orders to
U.S. factories for big-ticket durable goods rose in November. The overall increase was less than expected. But excluding the
volatile transportation category, the gains were twice what economists had forecast.

Stocks rose after the positive
reports, ending a holiday-shortened session at new highs for the year. The Dow Jones industrial average gained about 53 points,
or 0.5 percent.

Economists saw the new data as further signs that the economy is strengthening as 2009 nears a
close. Adding to the optimism was a wave of shoppers—some snowed in by last weekend’s East Coast snowstorm—heading
to the malls for last-minute purchases Thursday.

"We are seeing progress in a number of areas, from increases
in consumer spending and business spending to growth in exports," said Brian Bethune, an economist at IHS Global Economics.
"It all adds up to a recovery that is gaining some momentum."

Bethune said he’s forecasting that the
economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, will expand at an annual rate of around 4 percent in the current quarter.
Helping fuel the gains, businesses are boosting orders to factories to restock their depleted shelves.

Bethune
said growth would likely slow in 2010 to a rate of around 2.5 percent. But he said there will be enough momentum to remove
the threat that the recovery from the nation’s deepest recession in seven decades might falter. Other economists agreed that
the rebound in factory orders reflected rising confidence by businesses.

Orders for durable goods edged up 0.2
percent last month, weaker than the 0.5 percent gain economists had expected. But excluding transportation, orders rose 2
percent over the October level, double what economists had forecast.

Demand for commercial aircraft plunged 32.6
percent. Total orders for transportation products sank 5.5 percent as demand for motor vehicles and parts edged down 0.2 percent,
the weakest showing in five months.

Strength in November came in areas such as orders for machinery, which rose
3.5 percent. Orders for primary metals such as steel grew 1.4 percent. And orders for computers and electronic products jumped
3.7 percent, the biggest gain since February.

Analysts noted that demand for non-defense capital goods excluding
aircraft, considered a proxy for business equipment spending plans, posted a solid rise of 2.9 percent.

"Firms
are starting to believe they can come out of their shells and start thinking about the future," said Joel Naroff, chief
economist at Naroff Economic Advisors. "It looks like the business community has concluded this recovery is for real."

The number of new jobless claims fell to 452,000 last week on a seasonally adjusted basis. That was better than the
decline to 470,000 that economists had expected. And the four-week average for claims, which smooths out fluctuations, fell
to 465,250.

The decline in claims continued a trend that began last summer. The improvement is seen as a sign that
jobs cuts are slowing and hiring could pick up early next year.

The government cautioned that seasonal employment
from holidays and other variables in the calendar made last week a difficult one to seasonally adjust. The actual number of
new claims exceeded the previous week’s total. But the process of adjusting for seasonal variation reduced the number.

Economists monitor jobless claims as a gauge of the pace of layoffs. Analysts say initial claims need to fall to about
425,000 for several weeks to signal the economy is actually starting to add jobs.

The government said the number
of people continuing to receive regular jobless benefits fell by 127,000 to 5.08 million for the week ending Dec. 12. That
figure doesn’t include millions of people who have used up the 26 weeks of benefits typically provided by states and are now
receiving extended benefits for up to 73 more weeks.

The number of people receiving extended benefits jumped to
4.37 million for the week ending Dec. 5, an increase of 141,807 from the previous week. That surge illustrated that high unemployment
persists despite fewer layoffs. It also reflects the fact that 38 states are now processing claims for the extension of benefits
that Congress approved last month.

The jobless rate dipped in November to 10 percent, down from a 26-year high
of 10.2 percent in October. Some analysts fear unemployment will resume rising in coming months and won’t peak until hitting
10.5 percent next summer.

Still, the November jobless report showed that businesses slashed their payrolls by just
11,000 jobs on net in November, the smallest decrease since the recession began two years ago.

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