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Staffing shares steady after jobs report

BOSTON
Thu Jul 3, 2008 12:25pm EDT

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Manpower staffing specialist Noah Polorny administers a test to Kyle Scott as he signs up with the temp agency in Park Ridge, Illinois April 10, 2008. REUTERS/John Gress

BOSTON (Reuters) - U.S. staffing and jobs services companies' shares were little changed on Thursday, after a government report showed employers cut jobs for the sixth straight month, but unemployment held steady.

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The Standard & Poor's 1500 Human Resource and Employment Services sub-industry index .15GSPEMPL was down 0.19 percent at midday.

The Labor Department said the U.S. economy lost 62,000 jobs last month, bringing the total decline for the year to 438,000.

The subdued reaction on Wall Street -- on a day when U.S. markets will close early for the July Fourth holiday -- reflected the fact that job losses have not hit the level seen in previous recessions, executives said.

"Job losses have remained below the 100,000 mark ... and employment is close to 95 percent for the country -- much better facts and figures than have been seen during past economic recessions and by our global neighbors," said Tig Gilliam, chief executive of the North American operations of Adecco SA (ADEN.VX), the world's largest staffing company.

Roy Krause, chief executive of Ford Lauderdale, Florida-based temporary staffing company Spherion Corp (SFN.N) said his company still has more requests for employees than it has qualified candidates.

The employers Spherion serves are focused on retaining their current work forces, Krause said.

"They are more concerned about quality, they are more concerned about maintaining the existing work force, the right people at a location," Krause said.

The leveling off unemployment reflects that a few years after what some commentators described as a "jobless recovery" from the last U.S. recession, many employers do not have much room to trim staff, executives said.

"We never had a run-up, we never had the full boom, so I don't expect we'll get the full bust either," said Jonas Prising, president of Manpower Inc's (MAN.N) North American operations. "(Unemployment of) 5.5 percent is nowhere near as weak as you'd expect in a full-blown recession."

Manpower shares were up 3 cents at $56.03, Robert Half International Inc (RHI.N) was down 13 cents at $22.73 and Spherion shares slipped 3 cents to $4.64, all on the New York Stock Exchange.

On Nasdaq, Monster Worldwide Inc MNST.O shares fell 31 cents, or 1.6 percent, to $18.36, but Hudson Highland Group Inc (HHGP.O) shares were up 9 cents at $9.75, and Kelly Services Inc (KELYA.O) rose 4 cents to $19.22.

(Editing by Maureen Bavdek)



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