The Biden Factor: Jobless Claims Increase Again
New filings for US unemployment benefits increased for the second week in a row, according to government data released Thursday, defying analysts' expectations of a drop as the economy reopens.
The Labor Department reported 744,000 new jobless claims, seasonally adjusted, in the week ended April 3, an increase of 16,000 from the previous week's upwardly-revised level.
That was a setback in the otherwise upbeat jobs recovery, and an indication the mass layoffs caused by the Covid-19 pandemic continue to be felt in the world's largest economy.
Another 151,752 applications, not seasonally adjusted, were filed under a special pandemic aid program for freelance workers, about 85,000 less than the prior week.
That pushed total new claims last week to more than 925,000, but Nancy Vanden Houten of Oxford Economics said the labor market is on the mend.
"Jobless claims may bounce around week to week as the recovery takes hold, but we expect they will start to decline more consistently as the economy gains momentum," she said.
The data showed the number of people receiving regular state benefits decreased slightly to just over 3.7 million in the week ended March 27, the lowest level since the crisis began nearly a year ago.
But more than 18.1 million people were receiving aid under all government programs as of the week ended March 20, according to the report.
The United States has struggled with high joblessness ever since the Covid-19 pandemic struck in March 2020, but analysts expect the labor market to make a recovery this year as vaccinations tame the outbreak and government stimulus spending helps the economy back on its feet.
The March unemployment report released last week showed the economy adding 916,000 new positions that month and the unemployment rate dropping to six percent, taking a bite out of the 9.5 million jobs the Federal Reserve says the country has not yet recovered due to the crisis.

Ontology Is the Idea Finance Has Been Missing
The world created around 181 zettabytes of data in 2025, and AI adds more every day than anyone can read. The scarce resource is no longer data or compute. It is understanding, and understanding is a picture. Shayne Heffernan on ontology, the visual layer that turns infinite data into insight, and why finance, banking and regulation need it most.

Economic Calendar and Trading Strategies for the Week Ahead: July 14–18, 2026
A pivotal week for markets: US strikes on Iran reignite the oil risk premium, June CPI and retail sales test the Fed's rate-cut path, and the $1 trillion AI capital loop keeps driving the tech trade. Full economic calendar plus trading strategies across oil, gold, Bitcoin, FX and AI stocks.

Ontology: Agentic AI and Infrastructure
The AI trade so far has been a compute trade. The next leg is a meaning trade — and ontology, secured and settled, is the layer almost everyone is skipping. Shayne Heffernan on why ontology is the missing layer in agentic AI, and the infrastructure it needs.

Quantum Computing Just Became an Institutional Risk
Shayne Heffernan on BlackRock's quantum-computing warning for Bitcoin and Ethereum, Google's cryptanalysis research, the two on-chain risk vectors, and how KXCO's Armature L1 — post-quantum from genesis, coordinated by its ontology — answers a threat that just went institutional.
Every story, signed and delivered.
Subscribe to the kxco channel and get the headline, the AI-written key takeaways, and the chain-anchor link the moment we publish. Audio versions and per-ticker subscriptions arrive in the next iteration.

