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The dollar drops after the jobs data, and chipmakers have a negative impact on stocks

The dollar drops after the jobs data, and chipmakers have a negative impact on stocks
The dollar drops after the jobs data, and chipmakers have a negative impact on stocks

The dollar dropped as the weak U.S. payroll data lowered bets on the Federal Reserve raising interest rates before the end of this year. The KOSPI index in South Korea fell nearly 8% after Meta Platforms announced plans to sell computing capacity, raising questions about excess AI capability. The U.S. semiconductor index fell?more than 6 percent. Stocks in Europe rose partly due to the expectation of lower interest rates.

The U.S. data revealed that job growth was slower than expected in June, while payroll gains from the previous two months were revised down. This indicates a cooling labor market and reduces expectations of a Fed interest rate increase within the next few months. Last month, 57,000 new jobs were created compared to an expected 101,000.

Bret Kenwell, eToro's U.S. investment analysts said that the U.S. central bank has been "talking tough" on inflation and a strong labor market could have raised the temperature. The report today doesn't scream "labor-market trouble," but it does calm the narrative.

The dollar index (which measures the greenback in relation to a basket other currencies) fell by 0.52%, the most since two months, to 100.87. Meanwhile, the euro rose 0.47%, reaching $1.143. The dollar fell 0.91% against the Japanese yen to 161.08.

The dollar also gained 0.3% against emerging market currencies. Oil prices are little changed as traders watch progress in the talks between Iran, the U.S. and other countries to end the four-month conflict that has closed shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

U.S. crude climbed 0.06%, to $68.62 per barrel. Brent rose 0.11% to $71.65 a barrel.

The 'pullback' of the chipmakers weighed heavily on equity markets. The S&P 500 fell 32.26 points or 0.44% to 7,450.97, while the Nasdaq composite fell 309.35 points or 1.19% to 25,730.69. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 291.82 points or 0.56% to 52,597.06. Meta Platforms dropped more than 4%.

The MSCI index of stocks around the world fell by 2.44 points or 0.22% to 1,115.51. The pan-European STOXX 600 rose by 1.41% while emerging market stocks dropped 33.61 points, or 1.95% to 1,688.32.

Spot gold increased?2.21%, to $4,118.79 per ounce. Spot silver also rose?2.54%, to $60.64 per ounce. This was partly due to the weakening dollar.

The U.S. market will be closed Friday, July 4, to observe Independence Day.

(source: Reuters)