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Stocks and dollar rise after US jobs data is beaten; AI concerns simmer beneath the surface

U.S. stocks futures and the dollar rose on Wednesday after data showed that the U.S. created more jobs in January than expected, making it harder for the Federal Reserve to 'keep cutting rates' this year.

Labor Department data revealed that 130,000 new workers were added to the non-farm payrolls during January. This was well above expectations of a rise in 70,000. November and December have been revised downwards a little. The unemployment rate fell to 4.3% in January from 4.4%, which was below expectations for a reading 4.4%. Lindsay James, an investment strategist with Quilter, stated that this will likely lead to the Fed continuing to maintain?rates at their current levels until data indicates other remedies are needed. It also puts pressure on Kevin Warsh, the prospective Fed chair, as President Trump continues to call for rate cuts. Futures for the U.S. S&P500?and tech-dominated Nasdaq both rose by 0.4% and 0.5% respectively after trading 0.1% higher earlier.

The dollar gained 0.21% against a basket major currencies on the day after trading down 0.17% before the payrolls report.

Trading in Europe was dominated by jitters over artificial intelligence disruption. This?time, shares of asset managers were pushed lower. The same jitters had hit the software and insurance sectors the previous week. The benchmark STOXX 600 Index in Europe rose by 0.3%, reaching new records.

Investors are shifting their focus to companies that they believe will be less negatively affected by AI.

Derren Nathan is the head of equity analysis at Hargreaves-Lansdown. He said that large language models cannot simply replace medicines and raw materials. The soaring demand for rare earths and energy can be viewed as a positive by some industries.

The dollar temporarily cut its losses on the currency market against the Japanese yen. This is a sign that investors' thinking may have changed since the landslide victory of Japan's Prime minister Sanae Takaichi in Sunday's election. The yen last rose nearly 0.5% for the day, trading at?153.4 a dollar. It had traded at 153.6 just before the U.S. employment report. Since Takaichi won on Sunday, the yen has risen by?2.5% against the dollar. This is contrary to expectations that her stimulus plan would continue to put pressure on the currency and bonds. The dollar climbed to $5,050 per ounce from $5,076 an ounce earlier in the day, and gold lost some of its gains. Bitcoin was down 1.8%, trading at $67.429 but still above the day's low of $66,360.

(source: Reuters)