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/2023.02.03
/Stocks tumble, U.S. bond yields rise on strong jobs report.txt
*Jan U.S. payrolls 517k vs 185k estimate*Dollar bounces off 9-month lows*Amazon, Alphabet lower after earningsNEW YORK, Feb 3 (Reuters) - A gauge of global stocks | |
dropped more than 1%, while U.S. Treasury yields and the dollar | |
rose on Friday after a shockingly strong U.S. jobs report | |
renewed concerns the Federal Reserve may remain aggressive in | |
its path of interest rate hikes as it tries to tame inflation.The report from the Labor Department showed nonfarm payrolls | |
surged by 517,000 jobs in January, well above the 185,000 | |
estimate of economists polled by Reuters, with data for December | |
also being revised higher. Average hourly earnings increased | |
0.3%, as expected, down from the 0.4% in the prior month, while | |
the unemployment rate of 3.4% was the lowest since 1969.Equities have rallied to start the year on expectations the | |
Fed may be forced to pause or even pivot from its rate hikes in | |
the back half of the year, growing more confident after comments | |
from Fed Chair Powell on Wednesday that acknowledged the | |
"disinflationary" process may have begun. Additional fuel was | |
added after policy announcements by the European Central Bank | |
(ECB) and Bank of England (BoE) on Thursday."While it is very helpful to see the jobs increasing, it is | |
really a horse race between that ongoing income and how quickly | |
inflation comes down," said Lisa Erickson, head of public | |
markets group at U.S. Bank Wealth Management in Minneapolis, | |
Minnesota."The Fed really is in a tough place trying to navigate | |
between keeping those price pressures down and not causing too | |
much economic pain."Interest rate futures now indicate the Fed is likely to | |
deliver at least two more rate hikes, taking the benchmark rate | |
to above 5%.U.S. stocks closed lower, with additional downward pressure | |
being supplied by a 2.75% decline in Google parent Alphabet | |
and an 8.43% drop in Amazon after their | |
quarterly results.Apple, however, helped prevent further declines, as | |
the stock erased losses in premarket trading to close 2.44% | |
higher following its quarterly earnings.Earnings are now expected to decline 2.7% for the quarter | |
from the year-ago period, according to Refinitiv data, down from | |
the 1.6% fall expected at the start of the year.Other data showed the U.S. services industry rebounded | |
strongly in January, according to the Institute for Supply | |
Management (ISM).The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 127.93 points, | |
or 0.38%, to 33,926.01; the S&P 500 lost 43.28 points, or | |
1.04%, to 4,136.48; and the Nasdaq Composite dropped | |
193.86 points, or 1.59%, to 12,006.96.Even with Friday's declines, both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq | |
notched weekly gains, with the Nasdaq securing a fifth straight | |
week of gains, its longest since October-November 2021.European stocks closed modestly higher, erasing earlier | |
declines on optimism over the region's economy. The pan-European | |
STOXX 600 index rose 0.34%, but MSCI's gauge of stocks | |
across the globe shed 1.08%. The STOXX index | |
closed with a 1.23% gain on the week, its highest closing level | |
since April 21. MSCI's index was on track for a second straight | |
weekly advance even with Friday's tumble.U.S. Treasury yields climbed after the payrolls report, with | |
those on the benchmark 10-year note up 13 basis | |
points to 3.528%, from 3.398% late on Thursday, poised for their | |
biggest one-day jump since Oct. 19.The greenback strengthened in the wake of the data, climbing | |
off a nine-month on Thursday to hit 103.01, its highest since | |
Jan. 12, as the dollar index rose 1.149% and the euro | |
was down 1.02% to $1.0799.The Japanese yen weakened 1.90% to 131.18 per dollar, | |
while Sterling was last trading at $1.2053, down 1.39% on | |
the day.Crude prices turned lower in part due to strength in the | |
dollar and concerns about higher interest rates, with Brent and | |
WTI both dropping nearly 8% on the week.U.S. crude settled down 3.28% at $73.39 per barrel | |
and Brent settled at $79.94, down 2.71% on the day.(Reporting by Chuck Mikolajczak; additional reporting by | |
Herbert Lash; Editing by Kirsten Donovan and Jonathan Oatis) |