Weekly jobless claims just came in lower than expected—down 10,000 to hit 214,000 for the week ending December 20th. That's the kind of headline that usually sends mixed signals through markets. But here's the catch: continuing claims climbed 38,000, pushing the total to 1.923 million. So while fresh filings are easing up, more people are staying on benefits longer. For crypto traders tracking macro conditions, this kind of labor market nuance matters. The Fed watches these numbers closely, and every shift in employment data can ripple through risk appetite and altseason momentum.
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TokenAlchemist
· 17h ago
ngl the continuing claims bump is the real tell here - headline number's just noise for normies. this is where the fed's actual signal lives, and we're gonna feel it ripple through liquidation cascades within weeks. altseason momentum tied to macro shifts is such an inefficiency vector that hasn't been properly priced in yet.
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CounterIndicator
· 17h ago
What seems like good news actually hides a hidden danger. The more applications there are, the more it increases, which is the so-called "data trap," right?
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PriceOracleFairy
· 17h ago
ngl the continuing claims spike is giving divergence signals... classic oracle manipulation vibes, fed's watching close and we're about to see some wild altseason repricing
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SchrödingersNode
· 17h ago
Applying continuously actually increases? That's the real signal—beneath the calm surface, there are undercurrents.
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FOMOSapien
· 17h ago
The number of ongoing applications has skyrocketed by 38,000? Now that's the real signal. What's the use of fewer new applications...
Weekly jobless claims just came in lower than expected—down 10,000 to hit 214,000 for the week ending December 20th. That's the kind of headline that usually sends mixed signals through markets. But here's the catch: continuing claims climbed 38,000, pushing the total to 1.923 million. So while fresh filings are easing up, more people are staying on benefits longer. For crypto traders tracking macro conditions, this kind of labor market nuance matters. The Fed watches these numbers closely, and every shift in employment data can ripple through risk appetite and altseason momentum.