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Stocks, yields edge higher; Powell says economy still in good place

Stock indexes rose Friday, after Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell stated that the U.S. economic situation is still good and it remains unclear if Trump's tariff plans are inflationary. Meanwhile, U.S. Treasury yields on 10-year bonds also increased.

Stocks and Treasury yields fell earlier in the morning after data revealed that the U.S. economy had created fewer jobs last month than expected, adding to recent concerns about economic growth. The Federal Reserve's rate-cutting expectations were boosted by the jobs report.

According to the closely followed employment report, nonfarm payrolls increased in February by 151,000, while unemployment edged up. The report was the first to be released under Donald Trump. It came after a week that saw confusion about U.S. Trade Policy and global borrowing costs.

Powell's remarks came after Trump delayed and then imposed 25% tariffs against major trading partners Mexico, and Canada. The levies are still scheduled to take effect in early April. Other tariffs could also be on the way.

Adam Sarhan, CEO of 50 Park Investments, New York, said that the economy was holding up despite the recent stock market sell-offs. He added that a bounce after the recent oversold condition is long overdue.

S&P 500 registered its largest weekly percentage drop since September on Friday, while the Nasdaq confirmed on Thursday a correction defined as a decline of at least 10% since December's peak, due to tariffs announced by Trump that have fuelled investor uncertainty.

LSEG data shows that traders increased their expectations after the release of the employment data. They expect the central bank to lower borrowing rates in June.

Brian Jacobsen is the chief economist of Annex Wealth Management. He said, "The market has reverted to pricing three rate reductions in 2025."

The yield of the benchmark 10-year Treasury bill in the United States rose by 3.8 basis points to 4.32%. The 10-year yield has risen about 9 basis points this week and is on course to end a five-week decline streak.

After the largest two-day drop in Bunds in the past 40 years, the sharp selling of euro zone government bonds ceased on Friday. This was due to Germany's plans for a complete rewrite of its fiscal rules.

The benchmark yield for the Eurozone, Germany's 10-year bonds, fell 5.5 basis points to 2.83%.

The biggest weekly percentage increase in the euro against the U.S. Dollar since 2009 was recorded. The dollar index was up by 0.51% for the day, lastly at $1.0838. The dollar index fell 0.32% to 103.86.

Wall Street saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average rise 222.64, or 0.5%, to 42.801.72, while the S&P 500 rose 31.68, or 0.5%, to 5.770.20, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 126.97, or 0.7%, to 18.196.22.

The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 1.72 points or 0.20% to 852.10. The pan-European STOXX 600 ended the day down 0.5%.

The STOXX 600 fell 0.7% in the past week, ending a winning streak of 10 sessions, its longest since 2024.

Bitcoin dropped 3.31%, to $86,514.78. Trump signed an executive directive to create a strategic reserve for cryptocurrency tokens owned by the federal government. This disappointed some investors who had expected a firm plan of buying new tokens.

U.S. crude oil rose 68 cents, settling at $67.04 per barrel. Brent climbed by 90 cents, settling at $70.36.

(source: Reuters)