The Oklahoman

Wall Street rally hits wall of hot jobs, cold earnings

- Stan Choe

NEW YORK – Wall Street’s big rally to start the year wilted on Friday after a surprising­ly strong jobs report fueled worries about inflation and higher interest rates.

The S&P 500 fell 1% for its first drop in four days, though it took an up-and-down route to get there. The bond market was more decisive in thinking the strong jobs data could push the Federal Reserve to stay firmer than expected on high interest rates, which hurt the economy and markets.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 127 points, or 0.4%, while the Nasdaq composite sank 1.6%.

The market already looked as if it was set to weaken coming into the day, before the jolting jobs report dropped. Late Thursday, several of Wall Street’s most influential Big Tech companies reported weaker profit for the latest quarter than analysts expected.

That cast concerns over a rally that had brought the S&P 500 back to its highest level since August, driven by hopes that cooling inflation may get the Federal Reserve to take a pause soon on its hikes to interest rates and possibly even cut them by late this year.

Then came the jobs report, which showed employers created a net 517,000 jobs last month. That was way above the 185,000 that economists expected and a sharp accelerati­on from December’s 260,000 jobs.

Normally, a strong jobs report is good for Wall Street because it means the economy is on firmer footing. But in this upside-down post-COVID world, it could also be a worrisome sign. The Fed is in the middle of trying to cool down the job market, in hopes of taking pressure off inflation.

The concern in the market is that the much stronger-than-expected hiring could keep the Fed on the “higher-for-longer” path on interest rates that it’s been talking about, even if markets haven’t been believing it fully.

“It’s going to get harder to argue that rate cuts may be in 2023’s future if the labor market is able to continue like this, especially considerin­g that it remains to be seen how quickly inflation will fall, even if we have reached the peak,” said Mike Loewengart, head of model portfolio constructi­on at Morgan Stanley Global Investment Office.

Treasury yields zoomed higher immediatel­y after the jobs report on forecasts for a firm Fed. The yield on the two-year Treasury, which tends to track expectatio­ns for the Fed, jumped to 4.30% from 4.10% late Thursday.

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