KEY POINTS
  • Thursday's report that a record 3.28 million people sought unemployment benefits in the week ended March 21 was met by relief in markets that the number was not far worse.
  • Economists had expected anywhere between 1 million and 4 million new claims to be filed for the week , as the impact of the first state shelter-in-place orders affected workers.
  • "The focus by the market now is on the fact we're likely to get a historically large fiscal stimulus bill signed in the House by Friday. This is just the beginning of a tsunami of negative news," said one strategist.
Workers install wood panels over windows of a Saks Fifth Avenue Inc. store in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Tuesday, March 24, 2020.

The first crushing wave of 3.28 million workers seeking unemployment benefits is expected to be followed by millions more in coming weeks as the impact of virus-related shutdowns ripples across the U.S. economy.

Economists had expected anywhere between 1 million and 4 million new claims to be filed for the week ending March 21, as the impact of the first state shelter-in-place orders affected workers. The 3.28 million is a record and dwarfs the past record of nearly 700,000 claims filed in one week in 1982.