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Wall Street cheers US job growth and chipmaker earnings by ignoring the high price of oil

Investors sent U.S. stock prices higher on Friday as new data showed strong job growth in the U.S., even though oil prices continued to rise due to ongoing fighting near Strait of Hormuz.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average grew by 0.21%. The S&P 500 added 0.5% and the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.8%.

Microchip Technology, which had forecasted first-quarter revenues above expectations, rose 1.4%. Qualcomm jumped about 4% while Nvidia grew 2%.

The oil prices retreated from their early gains, after a new round of fighting in the Strait of Hormuz raised concerns about the ceasefire agreement between Iran and the United States. Benchmark Brent crude futures last moved a little higher to $100.24 per barrel.

U.S. employment increased in April more than anticipated, while the unemployment rate remained at 4,3%. This indicates that labor markets are resilient and reinforces expectations that the Federal Reserve will leave interest rates unchanged.

Ellen Zentner is the Chief Economic Strategist at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management. She said, "More strong jobs data leaves Fed where it has been for some time - watching and awaiting, focused on its?inflation mandate." Rate cuts are not on the horizon in the near future, but the lack of inflationary concerns in the report today should quieten some of the talk about a possible hike.

MIDDLE-EAST CLASHES The U.S., Iran and UAE exchanged fire on the Gulf. This was a test of a ceasefire that had been in place for a month. Investors are left uncertain as both sides downplayed the situation.

The market is taking advantage of every opportunity to put a quick stop to the war, said Jan von Gerich, Nordea's chief analyst.

"But it appears unlikely that there will be an agreement. I think that there will be more disruptions along the Strait of Hormuz for a long time, and they won't be resolved anytime soon. European stocks fell. The STOXX 600 index for the entire continent was down 0.5%.

Asian equities fell from recent highs, but remained on course for a strong week, supported by the revenue and spending plans of U.S. AI Hyperscalers that have boosted chipmakers in the region. MSCI's broadest Asian share index outside Japan dropped 0.8%. However, South Korea's KOSPI rose 0.1% and its weekly gain reached more than 135% - the largest since '2008 - thanks to rallies at Samsung and SK Hynix.

This week, Taiwan's benchmark index rose 7% and Japan's Nikkei gained 5.4%.

A DOLLAR INCH LOWER Sources familiar with the situation said that the dollar was edging lower, and headed for a second consecutive weekly decline. The yen, however, remained the focus of attention after Japan intervened in the currency markets to stop its slide in early May. The dollar last fell 0.26%, to 156.5 yen. It was heading for a second consecutive weekly decline against Japan's currency. The dollar's gains above 155 yen have been difficult to maintain after suspected interventions totaling nearly $70 billion in the last week. The euro was last trading at $1.178 while the Chinese yuan, Asia's best-performing currency, is hovering around 6.8 per dollar. This is close to its highest since 2023.

The British pound and UK government bonds rose on Friday, after British Prime Minister Keir starmer announced that he would not be resigning despite the devastating losses suffered by his Labour Party during local elections.

TARIFFS The U.S. Trade Court ruled that President Donald Trump’s?latest 10% global temporary duties are unjustified by a '1970s trade act. Analysts expect an appeal to be filed quickly and that the overall impact on U.S. levy will be minimal. Treasury yields rose in tandem with crude oil prices on Thursday, as traders fretted about inflation. However, they did not change much on Friday. The benchmark 10-year yield was 4.354% and down 4 basis points. Bitcoin is heading towards its sixth consecutive weekly gain at $79660. (Reporting from Lawrence Delevingne, Samuel Indyk and Tom Westbrook respectively in Boston, London and Singapore. Elaine Hardcastle and Mark Potter edited the story. Topra Chopra was also involved in editing.

(source: Reuters)