Showing posts with label #TrumpJobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #TrumpJobs. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Sixth Industrial Revolution -- April 16, 2025

Locator: 48480SIR.

The business, political and general interest media is letting us down: no one is reporting -- in total -- all the stories of all the corporations with announcements of huge investments in the US over the next ten years. We're hearing a lot of stories on technology, LCD, AI, etc., there's a whole lot more going on elsewhere and we're hearing very little of all that. 

These are the industries the US needs to bring back to the US:

  • pharmaceuticals
  • energy
  • semiconductors
  • auto manufacturing
  • steel industry

Whatever happened to the Houthi security debacle less than a month ago? 

Most amazing political story: Trump's opposition wants terrorists returned to the United States now that they've been captured and returned to their home countries. I honestly don't get it. 

1Q25

Banks: link here. 


Question
: for farmers, government aid (blank checks) or banks?

ASML, link here, SIR:


Border crossings, link here:


Tech, link here, $32 billion:


Tech, link here:


BofA, Merrill Lynch: profits flat but assets, clients increase. Link here.


Bank buybacks, link here:


Healthy eating, thank you RFK, Jr, link here:

a

Sunday, May 15, 2022

Goldilocks Number: 250,000 Initial Jobless Claims -- May 15, 2022

I remember doing the same back-of-the-envelope analysis in the early days of the blog and coming up with similar numbers. 

Link here. Or direct to paywalled MarketWatch



Wednesday, November 6, 2019

Increased Density In The Bakken -- The CLR Simmental Federal / Angus Federal Wells -- November 6, 2019

Locator: 10010CLRANGUS.

Updates

December 26, 2021: update here

June 5, 2021: CLR is starting to report these DUCs drilled back in late 2019. Oil prices were very, very low all of 2020. What a great time to starting fracking / completing these wells.

Original Post

Nomenclature:

  • H: middle Bakken, 1280-acre spacing, generally
  • H1: Three Forks, first bench, 1280-acre spacing, generally
  • H2: Three Forks, second bench, 1280-acre spacing, generally
  • HSL: middle Bakken; section line well; 2560-acre spacing generally
  • HSL1: Three Forks, first bench; section line well; 2560-acre spacing generally
  • HSL2: Three Forks, second bench; section line well; 2560-acre spacing generally

April 7, 2021: it appears the wells have been completed, or are in the process of being completed; runs are being reported for the first time as of 2/21;

September 15, 2020: CLR has permits for thirteen more Charolais South Federal wells in the immediate are, to the northeast, sited in section 10. See this link.

June 14, 2020: CLR to report four new Angus Federal wells this week.

  • 37055, ros (1/8/20)-->drl/NC-->1,471, CLR, Angus Federal 12-9H, Elm Tree, producing, 6 days, 2/21; cum 81K 10/21; cum 282K 11/22; cum 342K 9/23;
  • 37056, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Angus Federal 11-9H2, Elm Tree, producing, 3 days, 2/21; 28K first full month, 6/21; cum 116K 10/21; cum 291K 11/22; cum 329K 9/23;
  • 37057, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Angus Federal 10-9N, Elm Tree, producing, 4 days, 2/21; 41K first full month, 5/21; another 40K 6/21; cum 205K 10/21; cum 357K 11/22; cum 396K 9/23;
  • 37058, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Angus Federal 9-9H, Elm Tree, producing, 4 days, 2/21; 25K over 25 days, 4/21; cum 153K 10/21; cum 291K 11/22; cum 337K 9/23;
An 18-well pad in Elm Tree. The wells:
  • 37060, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Angus Federal 7-9H, Elm Tree, producing, 4 days, 2/21; 20K first full month, 5/21; cum 75K 9/21; offline 10/21; cum 129K 11/22; cum 148K 5/24;
  • 37059, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Angus Federal 8-9H1, Elm Tree, producing, 4 days, 2/21; 19K 6/21; cum 114K 10/21; cum 222K 11/22; cum 279K 5/24;
  • 37058, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Angus Federal 9-9H, Elm Tree, producing, 4 days, 2/21; 28K 6/21; cum 153K 10/21; cum 291K 11/22;
  • 37057, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Angus Federal 10-9H, Elm Tree, producing, 4 days, 2/21; 41K 5/21; cum 205K 10/21; cum 357K 11/22; cum 416K 5/24;
  • 37056, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Angus Federal 11-9H2, Elm Tree, producing, 3 days, 2/21; 28K 6/21; cum 116K 10/21; cum 291K 11/22;
  • 37055, ros (1/8/20)-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Angus Federal 12-9H, Elm Tree, producing, 6 days, 2/21; cum 81K 10/21; cum 282K 11/22;
  • 37054, conf-->drl/A, , CLR, Angus Federal 13-9H2, Elm Tree, producing, 4 days, 2/21; cum 26K 10/21; cum 269K 11/22;
  • 37053, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, , CLR, Angus Federal 14-9HSL1, Elm Tree, producing, 4 days, 2/21; cum 76K 10/21; cum 317K 11/22; cum 442K 5/24;
  • 37052, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Simmental Federal 5-16H2, Elm Tree, producing, 3 days, 2/21; 17K 6/21; cum 61K 7/21; off line 8/21; cum 198K 11/22;
  • 37051, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Simmental Federal 6-16H, Elm Tree, producing, 4 days, 2/21; 27K 5/21; cum 298K 11/22;
  • 37050, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Simmental Federal 7-16H2, Elm Tree, producing, 3 days, 2/21; 24K 5/21; cum 236K 11/22; cum 275K 5/24;
  • 37049, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Simmental Federal 8-16H, Elm Tree, producing, 4 days, 2/21; 24K 6/21; cum 260K 11/22;
  • 37048, conf-->drl/NC-->drl/A, CLR, Simmental Federal 9-16H1, Elm Tree, producing, 4 days, 2/21; 17K 6/21; cum 169K 11/22;
  • 37047, drl/drl-->drl/NC--drl/A, CLR, Simmental Federal 10-16H, Elm Tree, first production, 4/21, t--; cum 96K 6/21; cum 264K 11/22;
  • 37046, conf-->drl/NC--drl/A, CLR, Simmental Federal 11-16H2, Elm Tree, first production, 5/21, t--; cum 48K 6/21; total drilling days, 11; second bench, Three Forks; target: land the wellbore 66' below the Three Forks formation top, but more specifically 12' into the Three Forks 2nd bench; the wellbore stayed within the ideal 12' target window 93.4% of the production lateral length; cum 232K 11/22;
  • 37045, conf-->drl/NC--drl/A, CLR, Simmental Federal 12-16H, Elm Tree, producing, 6 days, 2/21; cum 183K 11/22;
  • 37044, conf-->drl/NC--drl/A, CLR, Charolais South Federal 2-10HSL, Elm Tree, producing, 5 days, 2/21; cum 376K 11/22; cum 471K 5/24;
  • 37043, ros (1/8/20)-->drl/NC--drl/A, CLR, Simmental Federal 13-16HSL2, Elm Tree, producing, 4 days, 2/21; cum 156K 11/22;

  • 23493, 568, CLR, Simmental Federal 4-16H, Elm Tree, t6/13; cum 342K 12/20; was offline 4/20 - 5/20; off line again, 1/21; remains off line 2/21; back on line 3/21; off line 5/21; cum 355K 6/21; cum 357K 10/21; cum 374K 11/22; cum 389K 5/24;
  • 23494, 360, CLR, Angus Federal 5-9H, Elm Tree, t6/13; cum 489K 11/20; off line 11/19; back on line 1/20; off line 4/20 - 5/20; off line, again, 12/20; remains off line, 3/21; back on line 4/21; cum 504K 6/21; cum 535K 11/22; cum 552K 5/24;
  • 23495, 240, CLR, Simmental Federal 3-16H, Elm Tree, t6/13; cum 372K 12/20; off line for short periods of time in 11/19 and 12/19; off line 4/20 - 5/20; appears to have come off line12/20; back on line 2/21; one day of production, 2/21; six days, 3/21; back off line 5/21; cum 378K 5/21; cum 384K 11/22;
  • 23496, 300, CLR, Angus Federal 4-9H, Elm Tree, t5/13; cum 390K 12/20; off line 4/20 - 5/20; off line 11/20?; off line 12/20; remains off line 2/21; six days, 3/21; cum 424K 6/21; cum 471K 11/22; cum 479K 5/24;
To date (9/19):
  • middle Bakken: 13
  • Three Forks, first bench: 3
  • Three Forks, second bench: 6
Earlier posts:
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Photos

A reader was kind enough to send a photo of the 17-well Simmental pad -- this picture looks west-to-northwest toward Williston. Isn't it just a superb picture of North Dakota? I just love it.

Think about it. Seventeen wells, $10 million each just to get started -- $170 million pad and on-going operational costs. Big, big, big business.

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The Graphics

September 15, 2020:

January 8, 2020:


Original post:




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On Fire



Saturday, October 5, 2019

Clearing Out The In-Box -- October 5, 2019

Jobs in America: record number employed; unemployment rate best in 50 years; folks are actually asking "how low can the unemployment rate go?" Mainstream media's headline: job growth slowing down. Well, duh. Unemployment:
  • for whites: 3.2%
  • adult men: 3.2%
  • adult women: 3.1% (will go lower if Biden's plan to bring 720 million women back into the workforce)
  • teenagers: 12.5%
  • Asians: 2.5% (no typo: 2.5%) -- I find that interesting that Asian unemployment is actually lower than "white" unemployment -- reverse discrimination? Harvard has a plan to stop that, I know.
  • Hispanics: at 3.9%, a record low; has never been this low; never;
  • African-Americans: maintains record low of 5.5% set in August
Less than a week away, 10/10/19:


Apple: strong demand for the new iPhone 11;
Pacific Northwest: looking forward to higher gasoline prices; link here at Platt's --

  • west coast refineries operating at just 78% of capacity
  • the lowest since November, 2016
  • almost 20% lower than this time last year
  • why: can't get enough crude oil
  • why: Pacific Northwest limiting CBR
  • much more at the linked site
Wind capacity in the US: EIA link here, September 27, 2019;

So, how do you interpret this headline (link here):


At the linked article:
  • 3,204 MW of solar gas canceled in ERCOT
  • 284 MW ok'd for operation -- 
  • yeah, that's what I thought; "284" is such a small number, I thought it was all wind/solar; wrong
  • I thought was solar
  • nope, here's the data:
  • fifteen projects (wind, solar, natural gas) were canceled in September
  • two projects went forward
    a 100-MW natural gas plant
  • a 184-MW wind farm (at 25% likely production, translates to 46 MW)
Later: regarding the ERCOT story above, I was "appalled" to the degree which the ERCOT folks would try to spin this story. Apparently another reader saw the very same thing; that reader wrote me:
The quotes trying to make this great news for solar seems to be a real stretch.
Of the 3,204 MW of generation canceled in September, 2,491 MW was solar and 713 MW was gas-fired. Manan Ahuja, S&P Global Platts Analytics manager of North American Power analytics, noted that the number of projects canceled was not unusual, exactly equal to last September's project cancellations.
I first saw that story at twitter:


Fake news: "jobs drying up in the Permian" -- read the story to see for yourself and if still confused, read the comments; first hint that it's fake news -- it's an "oil" story by Bloomberg

Social Security:
  • for all those folks who were worried that "Social Security" would run out of money, not gonna happen; need proof? 
    • politicians who make the Social Security laws are now looking at increasing benefits across the board
  • it's going to be hard for a senior to vote "against" Pocahontas when she promises an increase of $200/month for all Social Security recipients;
  • Paul Krugman: debt doesn't matter; 
  • the story is not in some left-leaning tabloid; it's in The Wall Street Journal;
Disclaimer: this is not an investment site.  Do not make any investment, financial, job, travel, career, or relationship decisions based on what you read here or think you may have read here.

Investing: will Enbridge (ENB) beat estimates again? Clickbait: the article doesn't give estimates for the 3Q19 report, unless I missed that, which is very possible. So, what are estimates for ENB this quarter?
  • mean estimate: 39 cents (EPS last quarter: 50 cents)
  • high: 42 cents
  • low: 30 cents
For the next fiscal year:
  • range: $1.60 to $2.15
  • mean estimate: $2.00
Do you really want to park your Tesla in your garage, attached to your McMansion? Unless you have a mother-in-law bedroom above the garage? Link here.
  • Close reading of the article suggests that "over-charging" the batteries is the problem. Tesla fixed that problem by over-the-air software updates to prevent over-charging. The updates reduced the range of the involved Teslas by 25 miles. 
  • Murphy's law of EVs: when you have but 20 miles range remaining, the map reveals the next EV charging station 25 miles away.

Best quote of the day, from a reader: "I hope Ruth Bader Ginsburg lives long enough to see Trup re-elected."

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For The Granddaughters

Friday, January 4, 2019

This Is Worth A Stand-Alone Post -- January 4, 2019

See this post also.


The Jobs Report Was Huge -- January 4, 2019

See this note also

When I saw the numbers, this was my unedited, not ready-for-prime-time e-mail note to a reader:
Supports my theory that movers and shakers around the world are purposely trying to push the US into a recession to destroy Trump. I don't see any data to suggest US economy is doing poorly -- at least to the extent that the stock market is imploding.
The New Time Times said that before the data was released that "if the month's figure reaches or exceeds the expectation of 180,000, it would be a solid cap to a year of robust hiring."


Link at The New York Times.

I've Never Seen "Whopping" Used In Mainstream Media To Report US Jobs -- January 4, 2019

Jobs: link here.


I tracked "jobs numbers" for several years. I then quit. I "understood" the methodology and the data and I got bored with the numbers. But if interested, one can start here. I provided what I called the "magic numbers" when I posted the "jobs report" the first time, and then updated it when the mainstream media moved the goalposts when Trump was elected president. Before the goalposts were moved, the magic numbers were defined by the mainstream press as:
First time claims, unemployment benefits: 400,000 (> 400,000: economic stagnation)
New jobs: 200,000 (however, now I see that the goal posts have been moved to 120,000) --  
Economists estimate the labor market needs to create about 125,000 jobs a month to keep the unemployment rate steady, though estimates vary -- Reuters.
The Magic Numbers (change with Trump administration -- see this post)
First time claims, unemployment benefits: 275,000 (> 250,000: economic stagnation)
New jobs: 150,000 (< 150,000 new jobs: economic stagnation)
Economists estimate the labor market needs to create about 125,000 jobs a month to keep the unemployment rate steady, though estimates vary -- Reuters.
By clicking on this tag, "jobs," one can see how a "whopping 312,000 jobs" compares with data points from the past.

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Back to the Bakken

Wells coming off confidential list today -- Friday, January 4, 2019:
  • 33754, 1,082, Oasis, Crane Federal 5300 34-27 7B, 50 stages, 10 million lbs, Willow Creek, t7/18; cum 105K 11/18; #21903 -- see this post.
  • 33664, SI/NC, MRO, Bears Arm USA 41-2H, Reunion Bay, no production data,
  • 33588, 378, Oasis, Muri 5298 14-28 9T, Three Forks, 50 stages, 4 million lbs, Banks, t7/18; cum 84K 11/18;  #18651, #18980 --
Active rigs:

$48.321/4/201901/04/201801/04/201701/04/201601/04/2015
Active Rigs64544059171

RBN Energy: south Texas feedgas demand ramping up with Corpus Christi LNG, part 3.
Feedgas demand for U.S. LNG exports has accelerated in recent months with the addition of new liquefaction and upstream pipeline capacity. The latest export facility contributing to the winter surge in feedgas flows is Cheniere Energy’s Corpus Christi LNG (CCL) in South Texas — the first greenfield LNG export terminal in the Lower 48 and the first such terminal, greenfield or otherwise, in Texas. Train 1 has yet to be commercialized, but already it’s added 0.5 Bcf/d of gas demand to the Texas market through December. The facility sources its gas via a number of legacy interstate and Texas intrastate pipelines, many of which have undergone reversals and expansions in order to serve LNG terminals but also another competing export market: Mexico. How will CCL change gas flows in South Texas? Today, we provide an update of feedgas flows to Corpus Christi, including a closer look at the upstream pipeline routes facilitating those flows.
This is Part 3 in our blog series examining recent changes in U.S. LNG export demand and the pipeline flows feeding it — a subject we cover comprehensively on a weekly basis. First, we started with the latest on Cheniere’s Sabine Pass Liquefaction terminal (SPL) in Cameron Parish, LA, where the start-up activities for Train 5, along with the full in-service of a new feedgas route via Kinder Morgan Louisiana Pipeline’s Sabine Pass Expansion project, have boosted feedgas flows to well over 3 Bcf/d in recent weeks. Then, we shifted our focus to Dominion’s Cove Point LNG export facility in Maryland, where the in-service of two pipeline expansions — Williams/Transco’s Atlantic Sunrise and TransCanada/Columbia Gas Group’s WB Xpress — has improved supply connectivity, with daily volumes consistently near or at capacity for the first time since the single-train facility began producing LNG.

Friday, September 15, 2017

Job Watch

Note: I no longer plan to update "Job Watch." -- May 24, 2018

This is Page7

Trump vs Obama: pending.

Reagan vs Obama: job recovering following a recession. Reuters and Bloomberg keep telling us job growth is strong, but never seem to really back up that assertion.

The Magic Numbers (change with Trump administration -- see earlier pages for previous "magic numbers")
First time claims, unemployment benefits: 275,000 (> 250,000: economic stagnation)
New jobs: 150,000 (< 150,000 new jobs: economic stagnation)
Economists estimate the labor market needs to create about 125,000 jobs a month to keep the unemployment rate steady, though estimates vary -- Reuters
For "first time claims," the mainstream media was consistently happy with first time claims ~ 275,000 under President Obama. In hindsight, the previous number of 400,000 seemed incredibly high.

For "new jobs," 125,000 will be the new "base." The final number under the Obama administration, was 156,000. Even though 156,000 was described as "tepid" by The New York Times, it was associated with economic growth. Now, June 2, 2017, Steve Liesman (and others) suggest that 121,000 is a fine number.

With both these numbers, the Fed under Janet Yellen felt comfortable raising "rates" for the first time in quite some time. [Update: January, 2018: Yellen out, Jay Powell in.]

After about the first two years of posting these updates, it had become clear/obvious that the figures were often suspect, if not outright falsified. On November 18, 2013, it was reported that, indeed, unemployment figures have been falsified.
In the home stretch of the 2012 presidential campaign, from August to September, the unemployment rate fell sharply — raising eyebrows from Wall Street to Washington.
The decline — from 8.1 percent in August to 7.8 percent in September — might not have been all it seemed. The numbers, according to a reliable source, were manipulated.
And the Census Bureau, which does the unemployment survey, knew it.
Take the numbers for what they are worth, I guess. Not much. Rick Santelli, CNBC, January 6, 2017, also suggested the numbers were suspect when the December jobs report, at 156,000, was incredibly bad, and yet unemployment number (4.7%) did not change.

Updates

December 7, 2018: jobs data suggests early signs of economic stagnation, and the Fed is still on a path to raise rates.

June 21, 2018: I will no longer follow "jobs" on a regular basis. Updates will only be provided when something remarkable happens. The Trump administrations is making America great again.

May 24, 2018: new claims far surpass forecast -- 234,000 vs 220,000 forecast.

May 10, 2018: unchanged from previous week, at 211,000 (less than the 220,000 forecast).

May 3, 2018: jobless claims -- essentially flat despite 24,000 decline last week.

May 2, 2018: ADP numbers leave CNBC analyst (an Obama apologist) speechless.

April 19, 2018: flat, down 1,000.

April 12, 2018: at 233,000.

April 6, 2018: bad reports all around. First, yesterday's first time unemployment claims surge 24,000, well more than forecast. Today, jobs added in March fall well short of forecast. Unemployment remains unchanged at 4.1%

March 29, 2018: lowest in 45 years; lowest since January, 1973.

March 22, 2018: unremarkable; 229,000 vs 226,000 forecast.

March 15, 2018: jobs report unremarkable; 226K first time unemployment claims

March 9, 2018: huge report -- jobs report for February:
  • forecast: 200,000
  • actual: an incredible 313,000
February 22, 2018: huge report; 45-year-low. Now down to 220,000. 

February 2, 2018: a very, very solid jobs report for January, 2018. Forecast: 177,000 jobs added; actual, 200,000 jobs added. "Very, very solid" -- CNBC.

February 1, 2018: a "healthy" 238,000 jobs added in January -- ADP.

January 25, 2018: rebound from last week, but still beat forecasts

January 18, 2018: record plunge in first time claims. Claims drop 4x greater than forecast.

January 11, 2018: unexpected surge; now up to 261,000; up 11,000 (or 9,000); harsh winter conditions blamed;

January 4, 2018: up 3,000 to 250,000; previous week revised slightly;

December 20, 2017: rise more than expected.

December 8, 2017: incredible jobs report.

November 30, 2017: essentially unchanged; at 238,000 (I assume the gap from November 16 report was due to Thanksgiving.)

November 16, 2017: claims surge; more than expected; up 10,000 to 239,000.

November 9, 2017: one week claims surge by 10,000; a bit more than forecast; but look at this -- four-week average: declined 1,250 to 231,250, the lowest point for the average since 227,750 in the March 31, 1973 week

November 3, 2017: unemployment at lowest rate since December, 2000 -- 4.1%. 

October 26, 2017: increased less than expected (good news); rose 10,000 to 233,000;

October 19, 2017: US unemployment claims fall to 222,000, lowest in 44 years.

October 4, 2017: hurricane effect; ADP dropped to a paltry 135,000 but "the market" is looking past these figures. 

September 28, 2017: first time claims up 12,000. The four-week average surged by 9,000, to 277,750, the highest level since February, 2016. 

September 21, 2017: huge, unexpected drop. The forecast was for first time claims to actually increase from 284,000 to 303,00 -- an increase of almost 20,000 first time claims. In fact, the number dropped. And it did not drop by an insignificant amount. The drop was huge. The number of first time unemployment claims dropped 23,000. If one adds the 20,000 forecast to the 23,000 decrease, the analysts were a) off in the direction of the move; and, b) off by more than 40,000 claims. 

Sunday, August 20, 2017

Making America Great, Images And Graphs -- November, 2016 -- November, 2017

This was in draft. It appears that I originally drafted it August 20, 2017, to be posted later. I'm posting it now simply to close out several posts in draft.

Read GDP, historical:


Unemployment:


The graph above is hard to interpret. At least it was for me. Two points are being made:
  • after the November, 8, 2017, election, the overall U3 unemployment plummeted
  • the Journal focused on the unemployment rate of those who "flipped" -- those who had voted for Obama in the previous election, but voted for Trump in this election -- although the bold red line catches one's attention, it appears that "all" voters participated in better employment picture
But then, connect that bold red line to specific states -- Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania -- the three states that gave the election to Trump were "in" that red line. See graph below.


June 20, 2017:


July 7, 2017:

Monday, January 16, 2017

How Can You Mend A Broken Heart -- January 16, 2017

More Trump jobs: Wal-Mart announces plan to create 10,000 jobs in nod to Trump -- WSJ. 
Retailer says latest job-creation effort will support 24,000 additional construction jobs.

More Trump jobs: General Motors plans at least $1 billion in fresh US investment; expected to create more than 1,000 jobs. Over at The Wall Street Journal:
General Motors Co. this week will announce plans to invest at least $1 billion across several U.S. factories, two people familiar with the plan said, a move aimed at underlining its commitment to U.S. manufacturing jobs in the wake of President-elect Donald Trump’s criticism of the auto maker’s imports from Mexico.

GM’s announcement could come as early as Tuesday, the people briefed on the plan said. The company will cite a number of new jobs in excess of 1,000 stemming from the investment but doesn’t plan to specify which of its factories are in line for more work, one person said.

The move comes days after Mr. Trump publicly ratcheted up pressure on the nation’s largest auto maker. During his press conference last week, the president-elect thanked Ford Motor Co. and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles for recently announced U.S. investment plans that are expected to create a combined 2,700 jobs. He then turned up the heat on GM to follow suit.

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Back To The Bakken

Active rigs:


1/16/201701/16/201601/16/201501/16/201401/16/2013
Active Rigs3649157187185

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In Other News

Skiing competition canceled: too much snow. Ski World Cup in Switzerland called off. I can't make this stuff up.

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How Can You Mend A Broken Heart?

Enquiring minds want to know.

#16 in the 20-song countdown.


How Can You Mend A Broken Heart, The Bee Gees

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When Depressed, Go Downtown!

Downtown, Petula Clark

And what a great week to go downtown:
  • IMF boosts estimates for USA GDP growth! Cites Trump impact!
    • President Obama: first president in modern history never to have 3% growth in even one year -- and he had eight years; more than some presidents
    • GDP growth in his last year: a paltry 1.6% (their words, not mine)
    • IMF US GDP projections: 
      • 2017: 2.3%
      • 2018: 2.5%
  • A record-busting inauguration forecast! Hundreds of thousands expected in DC!
  • MLK's niece voted for Trump
  • Downtown is getting safer! Chicago homicides already dropping significantly after Trump election. The 24 homicides over the year's first 15 days (a dynamic link) extrapolates to 584 Chicago homicides in 2017, compared with 797 in 2016. If that holds, that represents a decrease of 27% homicides in the Windy City, one year after the shocking Trump election. [Later, over the MLK weekend, ten homicides. Now, 26 homicides over 16 days extrapolates to 593.]
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No Match For "Hidden Figures"

From Yahoo!News headline: three new movies bomb at box office -- can't compete with black women! The bombs:
  • Ben Affleck's "Live by Night"
  • Martin Scorsese's "Silence"
  • "Monster Trucks" 
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The New Amazon Credit Card

Mine should be arriving in less than two weeks. Is the new card worth it? Let's see what MarketWatch had to say:

Gasoline purchases:
  • My current card gives me 5% back on gasoline purchases one quarter (three months) every year, which works out to 1.25% over the course of the year.  
  • Amazon: 2% back on gasoline throughout the year; as well as 2% throughout the year at restaurants and drugstores ("rewards" not cash)
Gift card:
  • new Amazon card "subscribers" received $70 gift card
Capital One "What's In Your Wallet?" may be the best competitor: 1.5% for all purchases and a $100 bonus when signing up.

MarketWatch says American Express's Blue Cash Preferred card offers 6% at US supermarkets; 3% at gas stations; and 1% on other purchases. Surprisingly, AMEX has no annual fee on this card. 

The big winner: Chase. The bank/card "will attract high-spending, low-risk customers who will use them responsibly."

The bigger winner: Amazon. It's a "rewards" card; not a cash-back card.

But money if fungible, and "rewards vs cash-back" won't matter. Amazon is more than just books.

Saturday, December 10, 2016

#TrumpJobs

This Post Began On T+28
Talk Radio / Talk TV Focused on Russia?
Mainstream America Focused On Jobs

June 5, 2018: This has never happened before in the history of the US. It has now happened twice in 2018: job openings (6.7 million) exceeds workers (6.4 million).


June 3, 2018: Walmart, Costco, and Target are all raising starting wages to nearly $15/hour, citing, specifically, Trump's tax cuts.

June 2, 2018:



March 9, 2018:


Cheniere: okays third LNG train at Corpus Christi due directly to Trump's decision to work more energy deals with China, May 23, 2018.

Louisiana: world's largest alpha olefin plant to come on-line later this year, March 5, 2018.

Wow: percent of S&P 500 firms beating sales estimates highest in over a decade, February 27, 2018.

Massachusetts utilities: ordered to lower rates after Trump's tax cut.

Hostess: $1.250 bonuses; and free snacks under Trump. Under Obama, Hostess Brands declared bankruptcy. 

Lowe's: bonuses of up to $1,000 to some employees; expands benefits; specifically cites the Trump tax reform bill. February 1, 2018.

ATT: With tax reform, AT&T plans to increase U.S. capital spending $1 billion and provide $1,000 special bonus to more than 200,000 U.S. employees. January 30, 2018.

Pfizer announces that it will increase CAPEX manufacturing by $5 billion in the US, specifically citing the new tax law. The drugmaker will pay a tax of $15 billion on overseas profits over the next eight years. It's too bad we don't have a fair and balanced mainstream media to really talk about all these investments in a fair and balanced manner. January 30, 2018.

Exxon: to spend $50 billion in US over next five years. Cites tax bill; huge bonuses reported by glassdoor. January 29, 2018.

FedEx: increased compensation to hourly employees; performance-basedincentive plans for salaried employees. Company cited Trump's tax cuts to make this possible. January 26,2018.

Home Depot: add another company to the list -- $1,000 bonus to each employee.

Discover: raised minimum wage to $15.25 for virtually all employees; and, a $1,000 bonus to 15,000 non-salaried employees.

Solar cells; washing machines: Trump issues executive order placing 20% to 50% tariffs on washing machines; tariffs on solar cells. January 23, 2018.

Disney: to give 125,000 employees $1,000. January 23, 2018.

Verizon Verizon employees (other than top management) will receive 50 shares of restricted stock, the price of which will be set on February 1, 2018. January 23, 2018.

Waste Management: to give each employee a bonus of $2,000. January 13, 2018.

Fiat Chrysler: now we get this, just reported on CNBC -- will add a heavy truck manufacturing plant in Michigan; will move a Ram Heavy Duty truck manufacturing plant from Mexico to Michigan; $2,000 to every employee; will invest more than $1 billion in Michigan plant; will add 2,500 new jobs in Michigan -- all because of the Trump tax bill. NAFTA? Dead. January 11, 2018.

Walmart cites huge tax bill to increase hourly wages; one-time bonuses; better maternity/paternity leave. January 11, 2018

Toyota, Mazda to build $1.6 billion auto plant in Alabama. January 10, 2018.

US natural gas production to set all-time records. January 10, 2018.

Incredible jobs report: December 8, 2017. Many, many records set.

Great jobs report. November 2, 2017.

Japanese EV supplier, Denso Corp: Maryville, TN; $1 billion plant; create 1,000 jobs. October 6, 2017.

Amazon: looking for American site for "second" headquarters; will employ 50,000. Announced some weeks ago; posted September 28, 2017.

GDP: most recent estimate of 2Q17 GDP at 3.1, better than the 3.0 forecast. September 28, 2017.

Daimler: to invest $1 billion in its Tuscaloosa, AL, plant to build plug-in EVs to compete directly with Tesla's Model X. Will also build batteries. September 21, 2017.

Haribo, the Germany gummi candy manufacturer: says it will open a factory in Wisconsin down the road; August 8, 2017. Source: CNBC

Toyota, Mazda: joint venture announced; $1.6 billion; 4,000 employees; new US automotive assemble plant; by 2021; production, 300,000 vehicles annually; August 3, 2017

Apple, Foxconn will build in Wisconsin, 13,000 jobs initially. July 26, 2017.

LyondellBasel: largest petrochemical plant of its kind to be built near Houston; 2,500 construction jobs; $2.4 billion

Boom (link here):
Making America Great Again: Trump's first quarter (1Q17) -- boom --
  • mining: +22%
  • construction: +6%
  • manufacturing: +5%
  • finance, insurance: - 2%
At T+173, Trump has turned the economy around. Link here.

Trump's energy policy: truly, all of the above

Trump rally: consumer sentiment index hits 10-year record after Trump elected president; consumer sentiment index hit relative lows during Obama's presidency. Trump rally: the market has its best first half since 2013

Petrochemicals - plastics, staggering: story here. June 25, 2017.

BWM: announces huge investment ($600 million) in SUV plant in Spartanburg, SC; will add 1,000 more high-paying jobs.

Trump's visit to Saudi Arabia: historical in terms of deals being discussed

Saudi Arabia: will announce a $40 billion infrastructure investment in the US as early as this week; posted May 13, 2017.

Infosys: huge story. Indian company known for outsourcing lower cost engineers to US, now plans to open a 2,000-employee tech center in central Indiana, with another 8,000 jobs for American IT workers in other locations across the country in coming years.

VW: building a new SUV at its Chattanooga, TN, plant; also, at the same link, Dodge has just built the world's fastest street-legal production model muscle car.

Toyota: to invest $1.3 billion in Kentucky Camry plant. This should go a long way in helping a state hit hard by the war on coal. 

Samsung, LG Electronics: both to make huge investment expansions in US; directly related to Trump election.

ExxonMobil: from White House press release --  President Donald J. Trump today congratulated Exxon Mobil Corporation on its ambitious $20 billion investment program that is creating more than 45,000 construction and manufacturing jobs in the United States Gulf Coast region.

Play-Doh: after 16 years of being made outside the US, Hasbro announces that Play-Doh manufacturing will return to the US this year. February, 27, 2017.

Existing home sales: 10-year high

Accenture: Accenture announces plan to bring in 15,000 more US jobs. February 17, 2017. 

Boeing 787 Dreamliner, photo op: Trump to attend roll-out of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner later this week, February 14, 2017.

Bayou Bridge Pipeline, 4,000+ jobs; almost a billion dollars in new economic activity, South Louisiana, February 9, 2017.

Intel, to invest $7 billion in Arizona; employ 3,000. February 8, 2017. Intel CEO announced this from the Oval Office while meeting with President Trump. Chandler, AZ; over 10,000 people in the area will support the factory; investment over the next three to four years.

Williams, natural gas pipeline; $3 billion Atlantic Sunrise pipeline, Atlantic seaboard, approved after almost two years of delays. Approved exactly two weeks after Trump sworn in. February 4, 2017.

Lockheed: US orders 90 F-35. A single tweet from President Trump resulted in a $720 million savings on the program. Add significant number of jobs in Ft Worth, TX. February 2, 2017.

Amazon: to add 100,000 full-time jobs over next 18 months; reported on Fox Business News, February 3, 2017.

Lowe's to hire more than 45,000 seasonal workers (spring gardening). USA Today, February 2, 2017.

US Army has directed US Army Corps of Engineers to issue easement for DAPL. January 31, 2017.

Amazon.com to build its first air cargo hub. UPS is toast. January 31, 2017.

Infrastructure Priority List, top 50, nationwide, January 24, 2017.

Toyota, expands factory; adds 400 well-paying jobs at Indiana plant, CNBC, January 24, 2017.

Foxconn, $57 billion, 50,000 jobs, Pennsylvania, January 22, 2017.

Breitbart provides a list of the "Trump jobs." January 18, 2017.

Hyundai, January 17, 2017: to invest $3.1 billion in US

Wal-Mart, January 27, 2017: will create 10,000 jobs in nod to Trump; investment will support 24,000 construction jobs.

General Motors, announces $1 billion in new investment; could create 1,000 jobs; may be more.  Wall Street Journal.


Amazon, 100,000 jobs over next 18 months, January 12, 2017: The Washington Post

Toyota, Apple, January 9, 2017: both Apple and Toyota look to expand in US

Alibaba, January 9, 2017: to discuss with Donald Trump one million jobs in US over next five years.

US Navy: Trump will re-build US Navy to size it hasn't seen since Reagan administration.

FiatChrysler, January 8, 2017: will spend $1 billion modernizing, building in Michigan and Ohio; will add 2,000 new jobs

Stanley Black & Decker, January 5, 2017: makes it a point to note that the company will build a $35 million manufacturing plant in the United States in what appears to be an attempt to either a) keep PEOTUS Trump off its back; or, b) get a PEOTUS Trump endorsement. The announcement came after it was announced that Stanley B&D acquired the Craftsman "name" from Sears.

Construction spending hits 10-year high, in days after Trump elected.

Ford, January 3, 2017: cancels plans for $1.6 billion plant in Mexico; will expand in Michigan

Sprint, OneWeb, December 29, 2016: Trump says Sprint will bring 5,000 jobs back to US; OneWeb will create 3,000 jobs in US.

Tesla, Panasonic, NY. December 27, 2016. $256 million solar panel factory in New York.

Cao Dwang, Shanghai, to Ohio. December 22, 2016. $600-million investment; Chinese auto glass tycoon; cites high taxes and soaring labor costs at home; comes after Trump threatened to declare Beijing a currency manipulator and slap 45% punitive tariffs on Chinese imports to protect American jobs. 

Amazon, Michigan. December 20, 2016. To open distribution center in Livonia, MI, hire at least 1,000 new employees.

Amazon, Illinois. December 20, 2016. Amazon adding 1,000 jobs with two new Illinois fulfillment centers.

Nuclear, Illinois. December 17, 2016. Exelon Corp will hire more than 400 permanent employees to work on capital projects at two Illinois nuclear plants; after Illinois govern approved a plan to provide billions of dollars in subsidies to Exelon to keep the pair of unprofitable nuclear plants from closing prematurely. 

Mexican moves. December 14, 2016, Bloomberg reports that US companies are already "dampening" plans to move US jobs abroad. Not even sworn in yet, and Trump already having an impact. 

IBM: December 13, 2016, Daily Mail: 
  • will hire 25,000 over next few years
  • announced day before Trump meets with tech leaders
  • 6,000 of those new hires in 2017
Dow Chemical Michigan. December 10, 2016, via "Breaking News":
  • President-elect Trump says Dow Chemical CEO Andrew Liveris to head American Manufacturing Council, tasked with finding ways to bring industry and manufacturing 'back to America'
  • Dow Chemical will 'invest in a new state of the art manufacturing center in Michigan,' CEO Andrew Liveris announces; says decision due to President-elect Trump and his policies
Carrier, Indiana. November 29, 2016. Carrier will keep plant in Indiana. $7 million tax break / 10 years / 1,000 employees = $7000 / employee / year = $1.92 / employee / day. Starbucks: $2.11 for least expensive cup of black coffee. Even if the 1,000 employee-number is inflated, one has to appreciate the PEOTUS for getting involved. Previously posted.

Ford. November 18, will not move some production to Mexico; calls PEOTUS.

And, yes, the twitter hashtag is already there: #TrumpJobs. Mostly an anti-Trump site but that will change. 

Saturday, January 22, 2011

JobWatch: Minnesota and the Dakotas: What Washington Can Learn From These States -- Not a Bakken Story


NOTE: see next note. I had planned to discontinue this page for the reason cited. However, with the impending ObamaCliff in play, it will be interesting to see how it impacts jobs, so for now, the page continues. December 6, 2012.

NOTE: tentatively, the November 1, 2012, update will be the last update for "Job Watch." After the election, it is likely that the "job watch" will no longer interest me. But I could be wrong. Perhaps I will update periodically if news warrants updates.

Instead: go to the "Doomsday: The US Worker"
Also, check out daily job cuts

NUMBERS TO WATCH

First time claims, unemployment benefits: 400,000 (> 400,000: economic stagnation)
New jobs: 200,000 (however, now I see that the goal posts have been moved to 120,000) --  
Economists estimate the labor market needs to create about 125,000 jobs a month to keep the unemployment rate steady, though estimates vary -- Reuters
As of August 2, 2012, two data points:
  • The unemployment rate is expected to have held steady at 8.2 percent in July. It has been stuck above 8 percent for more than two years, the longest run since the Great Depression.
  • The total number of people employed is 4.9 million lower than before the 2007-09 recession.
NEWS


December 6, 2012: weekly -- 370,000; four-week moving average: 408,000. Gallup, unadjusted, unemployment takes huge jump; back to 8.3%; government figures: only 7.7%. Non-farm jobs added: 151,000. Remember: the magic number is 200,000. Wow, talk about "spin," this story suggesting Obama is creating more jobs than Bush. The delta: 460,000. At one trillion dollars in stimulus, that's $2.2 million/job. Well, that's good. And it should be noted that the recession was beginning under Bush; the economy has apparently "been recovering" under the Obama administration. Some recovery. WSJ: tepid job growth fuels worry.

December 5, 2012: new jobs being added -- going down; unemployment numbers -- going up

November 29, 2012: 393,000, down from revised 416,000 the week before; the report anticipates, but does not yet include the 18,500 employees who lost their Hostess/Twinkie jobs this past week; it is amazing how journalists see this drop as a good sign -- but 393,000! Remember, 400,000 is the magic number --> economic stagnation.  393,000 is nothing to get excited about. Foreshadowing the Great Recession of 2013.

November 25, 2012: deadline for long-term unemployed loom, WSJ.

November 21, 2012: the less-volatile four-week average has approached the magic number: 396,250.

November 15, 2012: post-Sandy, jobless claims soar to 439,000; the moving 4-week average increased to 383,750.

November 1, 2012: claims fall 9,000 but numbers estimated for DC and NJ due to storm; 

October 25, 2012: last week's number revised up to 392,000 -- remember, the magic number if 400,000. Hmmm.  And then a 23,000 drop this past week. The moving 4-week average UP to 368,000.

October 18, 2012: remember that "best number" last week. Smoke and mirrors. California phoned it in. Today we get the real numbers -- after the first two debates. Jobless claims takes biggest jump in months: jobless claims increased by 46,000 to 388,000. The median forecast was for 365,000. Wow.

October 11, 2012: best number in 4.5 years. Down to 339,000. Problem: no one believes it; one large state did not process / report data (the actual story is confusing).

October 4, 2012: claims rise less than expected; up 4,000 to 367,000!
September 27, 2012: huge drop; applications fell 26,000 to 359,000; lowest number since July, 2012; Labor official says tropical storm Isaac did not have material effect on the numbers; see September 13, 2012 report. Unrelated: Campbell Soup to close Sacramento plant; Comcast to close all northern California call centers, citing high cost.
September 20, 2012: no tropical storm this time to blame the increase in jobless claims; decreased less than expected; still at 382,000; previous week's figures raised up to 385,000.
September 13, 2012: stunningly high increase in jobless claims blamed on ... a tropical storm; rose 15,000! to 382,000. [Revised upward to 385,000 one week later.]
September 6, 2012: moving average inches upward.
August 30, 2012: trend worsens; last week's revised upward by 3,000; this month down to 365,000.
August 23, 2012: jobless claims rise; long-term trend worsens; Yahoo/Reuters see silver lining

August 17, 2012: unemployment rates rose in 44 states last month (July). Out of 57 50 states.
August 16, 2012: initial claims increase 2,000, to 366,000. Reuters says this suggests the economy is healing. WTF?
August 9, 2012: fell 6,000 to seasonally adjusted 361,000. Does anybody care any more?
August 3, 2012: unemployment rate rises to 8.3%. Forty-one (41) consecutive months with unemployment rate above 8 percent. The only thing that surprises me is that Ohio is still a toss-up between the President and Romney.
August 2, 2012: "The claims number is not that bad." The increase was less than expected.

July 20, 2012: From CarpeDiem, North Dakota leads nation in jobless rate, June: 2.9%.

July 18, 2012: Hope fades for long-term unemployed -- Hussein BO.

July 18, 2012: Obama's job council has not met in 6 months. They've either given up, or they are working on their own resumes pending the November election. Regardless, they have a fairly easy job to do and could solve the major "job problem" with one simple "recommendation": require all EPA regulations to be reviewed by the jobs council before posting the new regulations. And only if the Jobs Council concurs.

July 6, 2012: US jobs data for June, 2012 -- things are getting worse.

July 2, 2012: US manufacturing declines for first time in three years. Then this inane observation: "adding to signs that economic growth is weakening." Ya think."

June 22, 2012: Arch Coal idling 750 workers. Coal states that vote for the president for re-election are baking their own cake, as they say.  This coal analyst says the same thing and suggests that the Powder River Basin could become the next "Appalachia," not a pretty picture.

June 21, 2012: four-week moving average highest since December 3, 2011; Nokia to cut 10,000 (on top of previously announced 14,000)

June 10, 2012: long-term unemployed is a crisis or an emergency according to the New York Times. The story at the link describes a national tragedy. Ideology has resulted in worse recession recovery in history. The president is either beholden to a) socialist beliefs; b) beholden to those around him and has no beliefs of his own; c) truly thinks renewable energy will produce more jobs than the oil and gas industry; and/or d) is in over his head. The article at the link is very, very telling: it's a fairly long article and almost everyone and every government agency is mentioned except two: president, and Obama.

May 29, 2012: something tells me this will have an effect on unemployment numbers going forward.
Hundreds of thousands of out-of-work Americans are receiving their final unemployment checks sooner than they expected, even though Congress renewed extended benefits until the end of the year. 
Congress extended the benefits if states qualified, but made it more difficult for states to qualify.  The article states that since the extension, the jobless in 23 states have lost up to 5 months' worth of benefits.

May 25, 2012: highest rate of teenage joblessness in 20 years; hope and change; killing KXL1

May 23, 2012: H-P to lay off 26,000 workers

May 4, 2012: 115,000 jobs added; expectation - 168,000 jobs These are atrocious reports.

April 12, 2012: first time unemployment claims rise to highest level since January; Easter blamed. One would think that would have been factored in; again, analysts surprised; they had forecast a modest drop.

March 29, 2012: Best Buy to close 50 big box stores. I'm surprised "they" lasted this long. I've never understood the allure of high-priced inventory; high-pressure sales people. It was just a matter of time before their customers migrated to Amazon. And when you get right down to it, other than televisions, the only brand one needs is Apple; and Apple will soon be selling television software.

March 29, 2012: initial jobless claims fall less than expected; 359,000 vs expected 350,000.

February 9, 2012: Pepsico to cut 8,700 jobs.

January 19, 2012: nice headline but then reality sets in.

January 12, 2012: So much for the "good news" stories of the past week or so when folks thought employment picture improving.
The Labor Department said initial unemployment claims jumped to 399,000 in the first week of 2012, the highest in six weeks, from an upwardly revised 375,000 in the prior week. [Remember, the critical figure is 400,000, which may or may not be meaningful, but the number the mainstream media uses to assess whether things are improving or not.]

The four-week average of claims also marched higher to 381,750 from 374,000.

The U.S. unemployment rate has fallen sharply in recent months and was 8.5 percent December, but some economists worry the drop has been due in part to discouraged workers dropping out of the labor force.
And that's why the administration wants to increase the length of time for benefits; keep those folks from re-entering the job market when the benefits run out. 

December 27, 2011: Sears to close up to 120 stores; lousy sales results.

November 23, 2011: US Cranes, LLC, company policy -- "No hiring, until Obama is gone."  The company's CEO says they cannot afford to hire new employees under the Obama administration. 

November 18, 2011: Obama halts drilling in Ohio / Utica; at risk -- 200,000 jobs. Illinois unemployment rate edges up to 10.1 percent. 

November 17, 2011: Seven-month low; 388,000. The four-week average is 396,750, the first time this average dropped below 400,000 since April, 2011.

November 10, 2011: First-time jobless claims drop to 390,000 -- lowest since April.

November 4, 2011: Dismal report no matter how you spin it. Unemployment rate ticks down from 9.1 to 9 percent. As if.  The Labor Department says the economy added 80,000 jobs last month, the fewest in four months and below September's revised total of 158,000.

October 28, 2011: Maytag to cut 5,000.

October 27, 2011: Stuck in neutral.

October 17, 2011: While the president continues to talk about programs to generate new jobs, Lowe's announces it will close 20 stores and lay off 2,000 employees.

September 22, 2011:  Continued disappointing numbers; "surprising" analysts -- again. Only 55 percent of young Americans have jobs.

September 20, 2011: From The New York Times -- prepare for another round of huge layoffs -- USPS (120,000) and Bank of America (30,000). I didn't read the entire article, but at least George W. Bush was not mentioned in the first few paragraphs. Nor was President Obama for that matter.

September 16, 2011: Yup, the unemployment rate in Illinois jumped to 9.9 percent following loss of jobs in manufacturing sector and layoff of just under 3,000 state employees. Nationwide, unemployment remains steady at 9.1 percent.

September 06, 2011: Illinois to lay off thousands of state workers by end of the week.

September 04, 2011: California employment sinks to record low
The percentage of working-age Californians with jobs has fallen to a record low, and employment may not return to pre-recession levels until the second half of the decade, according to a research group.

Just 55.4 percent of working-age Californians, defined as those 16 or older, had a job in July, down from 56.2 percent a year earlier and the lowest level since 1976.
August 23, 2011: GE announces slashing 81 jobs in Wisconsin as part of its medical devices headquarters move to China.  GE/CEO is President Obama's economic czar.

August 23, 2011: Illinois lost more jobs than any other state in the union this past July. To do worse than California takes a lot of work, no pun intended.
llinois lost more jobs during the month of July than any other state in the nation, according to the most recent Bureau of Labor Statistics report. After losing 7,200 jobs in June, Illinois lost an additional 24,900 non-farm payroll jobs in July. The report also said Illinois’s unemployment rate climbed to 9.5 percent. This marks the third consecutive month of increases in the unemployment rate.

Illinois started to create jobs as the national economy began to recover. But just when Illinois’s economy seemed to be turning around, lawmakers passed record tax increases in January of this year. Since then, Illinois’s employment numbers have done nothing but decline.

Data released today by the bureau confirms this downward trajectory. When it comes to putting people back to work, Illinois is going backwards. Since January, Illinois has dropped 89,000 people from its employment rolls.
August 19, 2011: California's jobless rate jumps two-tenths of a percent, up to 12%. Open up drilling, and watch the jobless rate fall overnight.

August 14, 2011: NY Times headline --  "White House Debates Fight on Economy" -- for heaven's sake, quit with the speeches; enough of the policy papers; cut taxes, cut regulations, and embrace the natural resources this country has to offer.

August 12, 2011: USPS (postal service) getting ready to axe thousands of jobs; could be as many as 220,000 over four years. Certainly we are talking tens of thousands by the end of this year.

July 29, 2011: Boston-based Boston Scientific Corp is cutting US jobs and moving overseas (China). ObamaCare simply too taxing. 

July 29, 2011: GE is moving its health care device division to China. GE/CEO is President Obama's economic czar.

July 28, 2011: Businesses threatening to leave Chicago; tax base untenable.
CME Group Inc. is evaluating whether to move some operations to other states from Chicago to reduce its taxes, but it has not decided on an exact timeline, CEO Craig Donohue said Thursday.

"Our tax situation is untenable," Donohue told Reuters, noting that CME is taxed more heavily than any of its global competitors. The company is talking with at least three states -- Texas, Florida, and Tennessee -- about relocating some of its business to take advantage of lower tax rates there, Donohue said.
July 26, 2011: Nation's largest health care device maker moving its headquarters overseas. The nation's economic adviser is moving GE's health care unit headquarters to China. 

July 25, 2011: RIM (BlackBerry folks) announced 11 percent cut in workforce; not about the economy; all about Apple. First time this company has cut workforce in its history.

July 21, 2011: Analysts raise forecast for increased first time unemployment claims from 405,000 to 410,000, and it still was not enough.
First time claims rose to 418,000 --> 10,000 more than forecast. This is the 15th consecutive week where first time claims exceeded 400,000. NASA's space shuttle ends; screeching halt; thousands of jobs lost -- direct and indirect. Direct jobs said to be around 20,000, probably more. My hunch: total direct and indirect jobs lost to end of space shuttle program will exceed 50,000. You can bet that mainstream media will minimize NASA jobs lost. Reuters headline: "signs of struggle in jobs market." Well, duh. As long as we are piling on, Obama's legacy -- the withering American dream -- Forbes.com.
July 19, 2011: Steve Wynn (Wynn Resorts) has it right; Obama screwing up the economy; "redistribution" is Obama's mantra. Even Obama's pal Warren upset with talk about tax on corporate jets. Not to worry; Japan will make corporate jets if jobs move overseas.

July 18, 2011: US loses 17,200 jobs in one day -- Cisco axes 6,500; and Borders liquidates, costing another 17,500 direct jobs. 

July 11, 2011: Cisco may cut 5,000 jobs.

July 10, 2011: Another job killer in New Orleans -- the end of the space shuttle program. The end of this program will result in more jobs lost than were tained in June, 2011 (18,000 new jobs in June, 2011; projection of more than 30,000 jobs lost when space shuttle program ends).

July 8, 2011: Wow, wow, wow. Analysts expected 90,000 new jobs. Actual number: 18,000 new jobs. How can they be so far off? Revised figures for last month, down 44,000. Unemployment number actually increases slightly to 9.2 percent.  The president says he is ready to "roll up his sleeves." And do what? By the way, this horrendous job picture was predicted and is pretty much right on schedule. Analysts predicted a further loss of jobs once the stimulus money began to run out. The bulk of the stimulus money was used to "save" state government jobs, betting on a turnaround in the economy by the time the stimulus money began to run out. But that didn't happen, and now state and local governments are "bleeding" jobs -- Reuters' description, not mine. Good, bad, or indifferent, the loss in state and local government jobs is striking:
Local governments shed 18,000 jobs and state governments cut 7,000 in June. The level of local government employment -- 14.143 million employees -- is the lowest since June 2006. State government employment is the lowest since August 2006.

The National League of Cities, which represents civic officials, foresees further job cuts for at least the next 18 months. In a statement commenting on the Labor Department report, the group voiced concerns that continued public job losses will also dampen job growth in the private sector.

Cuts have been particularly deep in education. In June alone, local governments shed 12,600 education positions. Since last August, when concerns about mass layoffs at public schools spurred Congress to send states millions of dollars, local education has lost 124,300 jobs.
July 7, 2011: Mainstream headline writers try to spin story, but first-time jobless claims of 418,000 reported today is an awful number. Yes, the number dropped 11,000 from last week, but this is now the 13th straight week of greater than 400,000 first-time jobless claims.  "400,000" is a number generally associated with a "stable" labor market. "Stable" means no change; not only are we not keeping up with population growth, but there has been no progress made in restoring all those jobs lost during the recession.

July 4, 2011: White House admits -- its stimulus bill cost $278,000/job saved or created. Over the past six months, the economy would have added or saved more jobs without the “stimulus” than it has with it. 

June 30, 2011: 12 straight weeks that first time unemployment claims above 400,000. The number this week was 428,000 (last week, 429,000) while analysts forecast the number dropping to 420,000. Didn't happen.  The four-week moving average of unemployment claims, a better measure of underlying trends, nudged up 500 to 426,750. The number 400,000 is the widely agreed-upon number that above/below marks improving/worsening jobs picture.

June 23, 2011: Unemployment claims up to 429,000; higher than expected.

June 17, 2011: Unemployment picture worsens across the nation. Despite headline writer trying to obfuscate the true picture. 

June 3, 2011: Unemployment edges up to 9.1%. Horrendous job report. Horrendous.

May 6, 2011: Unemployment back up to 9.0%.

April 28, 2011: After weeks of talking about "better" unemployment news, the CNBC noted that today's increase in unemployment claims to 429,000 is now the third week or so of increasing claims.  For newbies, "400,000" is the number to watch: higher than that, and unemployment is increasing, below that, employment is not improving. 

February 17, 2011: Unemployment benefits jump to 410,000. It is interesting to see that extending unemployment benefits out to 99 weeks has had the intended consequences.

January 21, 2011: Under pressure to energize the economy, President Barack Obama will put job creation and American competitiveness at the center of his State of the Union address, promoting spending on education and research while pledging to trim the nation's soaring debt.
Tracking The Progress 
June 3, 2011: the bar has been lowered.

January 31, 2011: New jobs so far mostly low-paying.

January 24, 2011: JC Penney to end its catalogue operations, close at least six stores and two call centers.

January 23, 2011: More jobs, but not if related to new refineries. No new refineries if the President  has anything to say about it

January 21, 2011: On same day that President Obama announces his new focus on jobs, Boeing announces 1,000 job cuts.  Obama announces that his new economic adviser will be the head of General Electric: expect to see more wind turbine subsidies.
Original Post
January 21, 2011

President Obama will focus on jobs this year, he says, as the 2012 election approaches.

He might want to talk to Senator Al Franken (D) from Minnesota to find out what's happening out in the trenches.

For one thing, a very well-respected company and, should we say, an icon of Minnesota has recently expanded, building three new plants on the North Dakota side of the border.
Warroad-based Marvin Windows and Doors has opened North Dakota plants in Fargo, West Fargo and Grafton.
Marvin’s John Kirchner explained why the firm expanded to North Dakota in the last several years: “The regulatory and tax climate in North Dakota ... tend to be more friendly toward the business."
Also, Kirchner said, it takes too long to get state permits, delaying expansion plans.
While pledging that “we are not going to walk away from Minnesota” and saying Warroad will remain Marvin’s home and biggest factory, North Dakota is a good location for company manufacturing plants, he said. 
Wow, wow, and wow.
  • Regulatory climate.
  • Tax climate.
  • Too long to get state permits.
Wow, wow, and wow.

If I didn't know better, that sounds like Washington and the federal government.

If President Obama wants to keep jobs in the US from moving overseas he should note that it is not just the corporate taxes everyone seems to talk about.  And it's not just just the regulatory climate. But it's also the phenomenal delay to get anything done, generally due to a) bureaucratic inefficiencies; and, b) legal delays on minor or technical issues.

How long can it take? Well, just to get the environmental impact statement completed can take five years. Not five months, not even a year. But five years.