Arizona initial claims for unemployment insurance dropped to 4,468 for the week ended April 20, down from 4,717 the prior week. That was down 4.6% over the year and down 16.2% from 2019.
U.S. initial claims for unemployment insurance fell 0.8% over the year for the week ended April 20, reaching 201,619. That was down from the prior week and down 4.8% from 2019.
The U.S. hotel occupancy rate rose to 66.8% for the week ended April 20, up from 65.8% the prior week. That was down 0.6% over the year but up 1.7% from 2019.
U.S. movie box office sales fell to $88.0 million for the week ended April 25, down from $100.5 million the prior week. That was down 45.9% over the year and down 41.9% from 2019. New movie releases were down 52.8% from 2019.
U.S. TSA traveler throughput ticked up to 17.3 million for the week ended April 20. That was up 5.3% over the year and up from 17.2 million the prior week. Throughput was up 4.8% from 2019.
Arizona new business applications rose to 710 for the week ended April 20, up from 690 the prior week. That was down 5.3% over the year.
Data on seated diners at restaurants using the OpenTable app is no longer being updated to compare the current week to 2019 results.
As of October 15, 2022, Google stopped updating mobility data.
Weekly Indicators
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Note: The official initial claims for unemployment insurance numbers for the U.S. are released every Thursday morning covering the week ending on the previous Saturday.
Note: See (http://www.eia.doe.gov/oil_gas/petroleum/data_publications/wrgp/mogas_home_page.html) for further definitions. Regular Gasoline has an antiknock index (average of the research octane rating and the motor octane number) greater than or equal to 85 and less than 88. Octane requirements may vary by altitude.
The U.S. Census Bureau continues to produce weekly estimates; however, the weekly estimate files are published as part of the
Monthly Business Formation Statistics (BFS) Release.One key dataset with these estimates is High-Propensity Business Applications, a subset of total weekly business applications in Arizona that measures the number of applications with a high-propensity of turning into a business with a payroll, based on various factors. These data reflect weekly applications for Employer Identification Numbers (EINs) in Arizona which are likely to result in employment and wages. These include applications: (a) from a corporate entity, (b) that indicate they are hiring employees, purchasing a business or changing organizational type, (c) that provide a first wages-paid date (planned wages); or (d) that have a NAICS industry code in manufacturing (31-33), retail stores (44), health care (62), or restaurants/food service (72). Applications for EINs occur before the jobs and wages are added, so this is a leading indicator.
Read more about the Business Application dataset from the
U.S. Census Bureau.