Houston Chronicle

Jobs report spurs stocks, treasury yields

- By Stan Choe

NEW YORK — Stocks rose in many of the markets worldwide that were open on Good Friday, while Treasury yields rallied after a report showed U.S. employers added hundreds of thousands more jobs last month than economists expected.

The U.S. bond market closed early after an holiday-shortened session that saw the yield on the 10-year Treasury climb to 1.72 percent from 1.68 percent late Thursday. It’s been rising sharply this year on expectatio­ns that a supercharg­ed economic recovery and higher inflation are on the way due to COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns and massive spending by the U.S. government. The yield began the year close to 0.90 percent.

In Asia, stocks in Tokyo, Seoul and Shanghai all rose a day after the S&P 500 passed the 4,000point level for the first time. Many major stock markets were closed in observance of Good Friday, including in New York and much of Europe.

Futures for U.S. stock indexes rose, suggesting the S&P 500 may add to its record when trading resumes on Monday.

Friday morning’s U.S. jobs report was highly anticipate­d, and investors hoped it would show their expectatio­ns for a strong economic recovery were warranted. Hiring blew past expectatio­ns, with employers adding 916,000 more jobs than they cut last month. Economists had forecast growth of 617,500.

It was nearly double the jobs growth from February, and it was the strongest since August. The data helped S&P 500 futures climb 0.4 percent, following the 1.2 percent rise for the index on Thursday to an all-time high. Futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq 100 also climbed.

“This is about as clear as it gets, the reopening is happening faster than nearly anyone expected,” Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist for LPL Financial, said in a statement. He also pointed to how the U.S. government said hiring in January and February was stronger than earlier estimated.

The numbers reassured investors that a sustained recovery appears to be taking root as more people get vaccinated and businesses reopen. So too did a corner of the jobs report showing workers’ wages aren’t jumping yet, even as hiring accelerate­s.

Average hourly earnings dipped 0.1 percent in March from a month earlier, on a seasonally adjusted basis. While that’s frustratin­g for workers, it encourages investors who had worried that a burst of inflation may be on the way. If inflation were to shoot higher and remain there, it would likely send Treasury yields spiking even higher.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States