The 3 major US stock indices closed higher today and this week. The gains were led by the NASDAQ on both measures. A summary of the day shows: Dow Industrial Average rose 450.02 points or 1.18% at 38675.69 S&P index rose 63.61 points or 1.26% at 5127.80 NASDAQ index rose 315.37 points or 1.99% at
Month: May 2024
The US employment data for the month of March came in less than expectations at 175K vs 243K estimate. The prior month was revised higher to 315K from 303K previously reported. The unemployment rate did take up to 3.9% from 3.8% while average hourly earnings came in at 3.9% YoY, the lowest level since 2021.
Oil prices edged up in early trade on Friday on the prospect of OPEC+ continuing output cuts, but the crude benchmarks were headed for weekly losses on U.S. economic uncertainty and limited crude supply disruptions caused by the Israel-Hamas war. Brent crude futures for July rose 16 cents to $83.83 a barrel by 0008 GMT.
Dollar weakens broadly in Asian session, continuing its selloff from the previous night, as influenced by rebound in US stocks and falling treasury yields. The focus is now squarely on today’s non-farm payroll report, a key indicator closely monitored by Fed policymakers. Preliminary data suggest possibility for an upside surprise in the jobs figures For
GBP/USD Price Analysis: Bears in charge as ‘shooting star’ looms The Pound Sterling holds to gains versus the US Dollar yet retraced from three-week highs reached at 1.2634 following a softer than expected US Nonfarm Payrolls report. However, buyers lacked the strength to keep prices above 1.2600, opening the door for a test of the 200-day moving average (DMA).
The strong jobs market has been bolstered post-pandemic by strength in the immigrant workforce in America. And as Americans age out of the labor force and birth rates remain low, economists and the Federal Reserve are touting the importance of immigrant workers for overall future economic growth. Immigrant workers made up 18.6% of the workforce
Every weekday the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer holds a “Morning Meeting” livestream at 10:20 a.m. ET. Here’s a recap of Friday’s key moments. U.S. stocks jumped Friday as Wall Street cheered a softer-than-expected jobs report — an encouraging sign that the Federal Reserve’s battle to tame inflation is working. “This is the kind
The AUDUSD moved sharply higher after the US jobs report. The price rises took the pair above the 100 day MA at 0.6580, the 50% of the move down from the December high at 0.66159 and up to the a key swing area ceiling between 0.6335 and 0.6345. Sellers leaned against that ceiling and have
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Amid easing Middle East tensions, safe haven buying in bullion seems to be diminishing as gold prices on MCX for June futures contracts fell by Rs 102 or 0.14% on Friday to trade at Rs 70,634 per 10 grams while MCX July silver contracts were down by Rs 44 or 0.05% to Rs 81,319 per
Dollar falls steeply in early US session following a disappointing non-farm payroll report that fell short of market expectations across key metrics including job growth, unemployment rate, and wage growth. DOW futures surge over 500 pts at the same time while 10-year yield dives through 4.5% mark. Despite the single month’s data being insufficient for
US ISM Services PMI dropped into the contraction territory below 50 in April. US Dollar Index stays in negative territory below 105.00. Business activity in the US service sector contracted in April, with the ISM Services PMI edging lower to 49.4 from 51.4. in March. This reading came in below the market expectation of 52.0. Other details
The U.S. economy added fewer jobs than expected in April while the unemployment rate rose, reversing a trend of robust job growth that had kept the Federal Reserve cautious as it looks for signals on when it can start cutting interest rates. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 175,000 on the month, below the 240,000 estimate from
Apple did it again: Despite all the worries about China, the consumer tech giant hit back with beats on the top and bottom lines, sending shares up 6% in after-hours trading. This is why we own it. This is why we don’t trade it. Apple’s fiscal first quarter revenue hit $90.75 billion, down 4% from
S&P index trades between 50 and 100 day MAs The S&P index is trading higher and near session highs. The current price is up 36 points at 5054.25. The high for the day reached 5058.01. That puts the price near the middle between key day MAs. On the downside, is the 100-day MA at 4979.26.
After the second round of yen-tervention this week, the pair caught a modest bounce from 153.00 to 156.00 yesterday. All that before a turn right before US trading to just under 155.00 and that kept running all the way to where we are now, near the 153.00 mark. The low earlier today hit 152.75, though
Gold prices were set for a second consecutive weekly fall, even as bullion traded almost flat on Friday as investors refrained from taking big positions ahead of U.S. non-farm payrolls data that could offer more cues on the Federal Reserve’s policy path. FUNDAMENTALS * Spot gold was nearly unchanged at $2,302.51 per ounce, as of
Markets sentiment in the US stabilized overnight, responding positively to Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s less hawkish-than-anticipated remarks in the post-FOMC press conference. DOW closed slightly up, while S&P 500 and NASDAQ saw mild losses only. Treasury yields and Dollar both fell in response to these developments. Key takeaways from Powell’s address include a clear stance