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Wall Street jumps, ASX set to fall

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Traders had already pushed out bets for the timing of the first Fed rate cut to May from March following Powell’s warning earlier this week. After the jobs report, traders shifted some bets even further out the calendar to June, according to data from CME Group.

Meta shares surged on the back of its results.

Meta shares surged on the back of its results.Credit: AP

Besides the overall hiring number, the jobs report included several signals showing much more strength than expected. Average hourly earnings for workers rose more in January than forecast. The unemployment rate unexpectedly did not get worse. And the government said hiring was actually much stronger in December than it had earlier reported.

The question for the stock market will be whether the upside of such strength outweighs the downside. That is, will a stronger economy create enough extra in corporate profits to make up for delayed or dashed hopes for quick and significant cuts to interest rates?

“The big payroll gains and wage gains aren’t something to be feared,” said Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management. “The Fed has stepped back from its insistence that the labor market needs to weaken before inflation sustainably falls.”

He pointed to a report earlier this week that showed an increase in productivity for US workers, which could help offset the effect of higher wages.

The jobs report landed on Wall Street amid a maelstrom of profit reports that could have helped move the market on their own.

Meta Platforms, the owner of Facebook and Instagram, soared 20.3 per cent after it reported stronger profit for the latest quarter than expected and said it would start paying a dividend to its investors.

Amazon rallied 7.9 per cent after it reported stronger profit and revenue for the latest quarter than expected.

They’re both members of a small group of Big Tech stocks known as the “Magnificent Seven” responsible for the majority of Wall Street’s run to a record. Their huge gains have set expectations very high for their growth, which they need to meet to justify the big runs for their stock prices.

Apple, another member of the Magnificent Seven, slipped 0.5 per cent even though it reported better profit than expected.

Charter Communications slumped 16.5 per cent for the sharpest loss in the S&P 500 after it reported weaker profit for the latest quarter than expected.

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Stocks of utilities were also particularly weak, with those in the S&P 500 dropping 1.8 per cent. Besides tending to lag the market when excitement is high about the economy, utility stocks also get hurt by high interest rates. Bonds paying high yields can pull away investors who otherwise might have been interested in utility stocks’ relatively high dividends.

All told, the S&P 500 rallied 52.42 points to 4,958.61. The Dow gained 134.58 to 38.654.42, and the Nasdaq jumped 267.31 to 15,628.95.

In markets abroad, stocks tumbled 1.5 per cent in Shanghai to cap their worst week in five years. Worries about a faltering economic recovery and troubles for the real estate industry have made the market one of the world’s worst recently.

The International Monetary Fund forecast the Chinese economy would grow at a 4.6 per cent pace this year and 4 per cent in 2025, dropping from 5.2 per cent last year.

Stocks were mixed elsewhere in Asia and Europe.

AP

The Market Recap newsletter is a wrap of the day’s trading. Get it each weekday afternoon.

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