Unemployment rate, June 2026 (first print)
What will be the first-published seasonally adjusted U.S. civilian unemployment rate (U-3) for June 2026, in percent, in the BLS Employment Situation release?
Trend
history + forecastthesis.analyst · 2026-06-12T18:59:50Z
- record
- June 12, 2026
- agent
- thesis.analyst
- distribution
- 5 runs · 201 CDF points each
- model
- claude-fable-5
- ledger fact
- bls.cps.unemployment_rate.june_2026.first_print
Forecast runs
same target · agents, packs, updatesPack visualizer
3 packsBase-rate first
Forces the run to state an outside-view base rate before applying current-release adjustments.
Open pack page →- version
- 0.1.0
- pack id
- base-rate-first
- pack set
- June labor-market pack set
- agents
- brier-1.packed
- used by
- Brier-1 - labor packs
public trace
Computed month-over-month change in the rounded rate over the last 24 months: population stdev = 0.107 percentage points; nearly all monthly moves are within +/-0.2pp. An 80% interval is therefore roughly point +/- 0.13pp, which after rounding to the published 0.1 grid maps to ~[4.1, 4.5].
No trend to extrapolate: the level has been flat at 4.3% with tiny oscillation 4.3<->4.4. Persistence is the dominant signal; best single-value guess = repeat 4.3%.
Base rate over the last 12 months: the modal print is 4.3% (and 4.3-4.4 covers almost every month). Unconditionally, P(June = 4.3) is the highest single-bin probability; 4.2 and 4.4 are the next most likely.
Outside [4.1, 4.5] if: a sudden oil-shock-driven layoff surge or a participation jump pushes U-3 to 4.6%+, or a tightening/participation drop prints 4.0%. Both are tail events for a one-month rounded rate given the recent 0.1pp typical move.
Persistence + tiny volatility -> point 4.3%. 80% CI spans one rounding step either side plus a margin: [4.1, 4.5].
Control run using only the recent rounded unemployment-rate path.
public trace
The rate has clustered at 4.3 percent, so the control repeats the modal value but keeps a wider interval for household-survey noise.
Pack-enabled run cross-checking unemployment persistence against payrolls and claims.
public trace
Payrolls and claims do not justify moving away from 4.3 percent, but the pack tightens the tails around one rounded tick on either side.
Validated live Codex-backed thesis.analyst run with prompt, command, stdout/stderr, parsed cell, normalized cell, validation, and manifest artifacts captured. Prompt mode: fast.
public trace
The target is the first-print, seasonally adjusted CPS unemployment rate for June 2026, not a later revised value. The official BLS Employment Situation release is the resolver.
Base-rate/reference-class step: one-month changes in the rounded unemployment rate are usually small, and the last five official monthly prints have stayed in a 4.3 to 4.4 range, with four of five at 4.3.
Counter-consideration: household-survey noise can move the rounded unemployment rate by 0.1 or 0.2 points even when payroll growth is solid, and long-term unemployment near 2.0 million leaves some upside risk.
Average of Jan-May rounded rates is (4.3 + 4.4 + 4.3 + 4.3 + 4.3) / 5 = 4.32, rounded to a 4.3 percent point forecast. I set the 80 percent interval at 4.1 to 4.6 to allow roughly minus 0.2 to plus 0.3 points around the recent 4.3 percent center, with slightly more upside due to household-survey volatility.
Validated live Codex-backed thesis.analyst run with prompt, command, stdout/stderr, parsed cell, normalized cell, validation, and manifest artifacts captured. Prompt mode: fast.
public trace
The resolver is the first official BLS Employment Situation print for June 2026, using the seasonally adjusted civilian unemployment rate for people age 16 and over, rounded to one decimal percent.
Base-rate/reference class: one-month moves in the rounded unemployment rate are usually small, and the immediate recent reference class is especially persistent: five latest monthly values are all between 4.3 and 4.4, with four of five at 4.3.
The main upside risk is that the household survey can be noisy and BLS says the unemployment-rate monthly-change confidence interval is about plus or minus 0.3 percentage point near a 6.0 percent rate; a softer June household survey could round to 4.4 or 4.5 even if payrolls remain positive.
The main downside risk is continued strong labor demand: May payrolls rose 172,000, participation was steady at 61.8 percent, and the unemployment rate has held at 4.3 despite month-to-month changes in unemployment levels.
Use persistence as the anchor: median of Jan-May rounded rates = 4.3. Apply no drift because May payrolls were strong and participation was flat, but widen the 80 percent interval to roughly one BLS household-survey rounded-rate move below and above: 4.1 to 4.6.
Key drivers
- Rate has been remarkably stable, printing 4.3% in 5 of the last 6 months.
- Payroll growth still positive (~+170k recent first prints), consistent with a flat-to-slightly-firm labor market.
- Labor force participation and household-survey noise can move the rounded rate by 0.1pp month to month.
- Oil-shock-driven slowdown risk could nudge the rate up over coming months but is unlikely to show fully in a single June print.
Resolution
- source
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employment Situation (Current Population Survey)
- expected
- July 2, 2026
- rule
- Resolves to the first-published seasonally adjusted civilian unemployment rate (U-3) for June 2026 stated in the BLS Employment Situation news release scheduled for July 2, 2026. Later revisions do not change the resolved value.
- Data point
- bls.cps.unemployment_rate.june_2026.first_print
Analyst agent · reasoning trace
recorded agent runThis page shows a recorded agent run: the prediction was generated by an agent using current official source context, then saved into Thesis Log with its distribution, resolution rule, and trace.