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REPEAT: MNI DATA ANALYSIS: US Jobless Claims Fall By 4,000>

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 12:30 GMT Mar 15
--Import Prices +0.4%; Ex Fuels +0.5%; Ex-Petro +0.5%
--March 3 Week Jobless Claims Revised Down 1k To 231,000
--Continuing claims Rose 4k To 1.88m In March 3 week
By Sara Haire and Holly Stokes
     WASHINGTON (MNI) - Initial claims U.S. state unemployment benefits 
fell by 4,000 to 226,000 in the March 10 week, slightly below the 
228,000 level expected by analysts in an MNI survey, data released by 
the Labor Department Thursday showed. 
     The four-week moving average for initial claims, which tends to be 
a better measure of the underlying trend of the data, fell by 750 to 
221,500 in the March 10 week. 
     If the number of headline claims does not change next week and 
there are no revisions to data from the past four weeks, the four-week 
average will rise by 1,500 as the low 220,000 level in the February 17 
week rolls out of the calculation. 
     Seasonal adjustment factors had expected a decrease of 7.5%, or 
17,011, in unadjusted claims in the week. Instead, unadjusted claims 
fell by 20,922 (9.3%) to 204,591. The current week's level remains below 
the 222,227 level in the comparable week a year ago. 
--CONTINUING CLAIMS RISE
     The level of continuing claims rose by 4,000 to 1.879 million in 
the March 3 week. Despite the increase, this level is still in line with 
the recent trend and far below the 2.025 million seen in the comparable 
week last year. 
     The seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate remained at 1.3% 
in the March 3 week. The current week's rate is down from 1.5% in the 
same week a year earlier. 
     The only states where claims were estimated were Maine and 
Colorado. However, the claims taking procedures in the Virgin Islands 
and Puerto Rico have still not returned to normal.   
     The unemployment rate among the insured labor force is well below 
that reported monthly by the Labor Department because claims are 
approved for the most part only for job losers, not the job leavers and 
labor force reentrants included in the monthly report. 
--IMPORTS RISE, FUELS FALL
     Also released on Thursday, the BLS reported that import prices rose 
0.4%, rising for the seventh consecutive month in February, with 
increases in all categories except fuels and lubricants and nonmetals 
related to durable goods. Fuel imports posted the first monthly decrease 
since July when the index fell 1.0%. 
     Overall fuel prices fell 0.6%, much lower than the series of gains 
in the past few months, and lower than the 3.2% seen in January. 
Petroleum prices fell 0.5%, with an even larger 3.0% decline in natural 
gas prices. Crude also fell 1.5% in the month. 
     However, despite these declines in fuels, import prices were up 
0.5% excluding petroleum and were up 0.5% excluding all fuels. There was 
strength across the board in February, with foods, feeds, and beverages 
rising 1.1%, making it the largest increase since September. Capital 
goods rose 0.6% in the month which was the largest increase since April 
2008 when it rose 0.9%. Autos were also up in the month and consumer 
goods, excluding autos rose 0.5%, the highest percentage increase since 
January 2014. 
     Overall import prices were up 3.5% year/year, while prices 
excluding fuels were up 2.1% year/year and prices excluding petroleum 
were up 2.1% year/year, which indicates that despite the declines this 
month, energy prices were still leading the rise for imported inflation. 
--PRICES UP IN REGIONS
     By region, prices for imports from most industrialized countries 
were higher, with the one exception being from Mexico, which declined by 
0.5% in February. However, Canada did see a soft 0.2% gain, smaller than 
the previous 1.4% increase. 
     Total export prices rose 0.2% in February as agricultural export 
prices rose 0.6%. Export prices excluding agriculture saw a 0.2% 
increase. Export prices were up 3.3% from a year earlier and were up 
3.6% excluding agriculture. 
     ** MNI Washington Bureau: 202-371-2121 ** 

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