Wall Street Closes Mostly Up On Strong Jobs Report

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2022-02-05 HKT 05:29

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  • The United States unexpectedly added 467,000 jobs in January. Photo: Shutterstock

    The United States unexpectedly added 467,000 jobs in January. Photo: Shutterstock

Wall Street stocks finished mostly higher on Friday as markets weighed a surprisingly good US jobs report that raised expectations for aggressive tightening in monetary policy.

The United States added an unexpectedly robust 467,000 jobs in January, according to Labor Department data that also significantly raised job figures for November and December.

While the report suggests economic health, another big rise in 10-year US Treasury note yields Friday focused concerns on expectations for multiple Federal Reserve interest rate hikes this year.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average finished down 0.1 percent at 35,089.74.

The broad-based S&P 500 gained 0.5 percent to 4,500.53, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index jumped 1.6 percent to 14,098.01.

All three indices posted gains for the week.

Art Hogan, chief strategist at National Securities, said this week's gains showed "there is more of a focus on the micro, meaning earnings, rather than macro, meaning monetary policy," noting that the majority of major companies results have been solid.

But markets remain focused on inflation, with upcoming consumer price reports a potential source of volatility.

"Persistent inflation, like a house fire, would force the Fed to barrel in and hose down inflation without regard for the upholstery, in this case equities," said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Cresset Capital Management.

Among individual companies, Amazon surged 13.5 percent as the company reported stronger-than-expected results despite higher labor, sourcing and delivery costs, with revenues jumping nine percent to $137.4 billion in the fourth quarter.

Snap was another big winner, soaring nearly 60 percent after the firm behind messaging app Snapchat reported its first-ever quarter profit.

But Ford slumped nearly 10 percent as the automaker's fourth-quarter profits lagged analyst estimates, with the company citing supply chain problems as a factor. (AFP)

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