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REFILE - Wall St. drops, Treasury yields increase on mixed jobs report and renewed tariff threats

REFILE - Wall St. drops, Treasury yields increase on mixed jobs report and renewed tariff threats

Wall Street plunged sharply on Friday, and the benchmark Treasury yields rose in response to a mixed report on payrolls, weak data for consumer sentiment and renewed trade war fears.

The three major U.S. indexes fell, and the selling accelerated after reports that U.S. president Donald Trump would announce new tariffs shortly.

The long-awaited employment report revealed that the U.S. gained 143,000 new jobs in January. This is 53.4% less than December's revised upwardly 307,000.

The report was distorted by the annual benchmark revisions along with California wildfires as well as unusually cold weather. It also showed a hotter than expected wage growth, and a surprising dip in unemployment rates, from 4,1% to 4.0%.

Rob Williams, chief investment strategy at Sage Advisory Services, Austin, Texas said that the market is still trying to digest all the data.

The headline was not as good, but the revisions in the last two month were positive and the hourly earnings also increased.

According to an exclusive, Trump will announce a new round of reciprocal duties as soon as Friday. This news sparked fears of a trade war.

Williams predicted that this year would be a volatile one. Williams said, "With trade there is the bark and bite. The bite may not be bad, but there will be a lot more barking."

Amazon announced disappointing growth in the cloud computing segment on Thursday and lower-than expected revenue and profits for its first quarter.

Microsoft's and Alphabet's similar disappointments earlier this week have fuelled suspicions that megacap tech stocks and those in tech-related sectors are losing momentum.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 315.98, or 0.71% to 44,431.65, while the S&P 500 declined 50.42, or 0.85% to 6,031.81, and the Nasdaq Composite was down 257.63, or 1.33% to 19,529.73.

After the release of the January employment data, European stocks followed the U.S. stock market lower.

MSCI's global stock index fell by 5.60 points or 0.61% to 869.97. The STOXX 600 fell by 0.38% while Europe's FTSEurofirst 300 fell by 8.54 points or 0.39%.

Emerging market stocks increased 3.83 points or 0.35% to 1,106.30. MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan closed up 0.36% to 582.10 while Japan's Nikkei dropped 279.51 or 0.72% to 38,787.01.

The U.S. Treasury yields increased on the back of higher revisions for previous-month jobs and a surprising decline in the unemployment rates, despite the disappointing headline figure.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. notes increased 5.7 basis points from 4.438% at late Thursday to 4.495%. The 30-year bond rate rose 4.6 basis point to 4.6926%, from 4.647% on Thursday.

The yield on the 2-year bond, which is usually in line with expectations of interest rates for the Federal Reserve (Fed), rose by 6.9 basis points, to 4.277% from 4.208%, late Thursday.

In choppy trading, the dollar gained some ground after the employment report.

The dollar index (which measures the greenback versus a basket including the yen, the euro and other currencies) rose by 0.41%, to 108.10; the euro fell by 0.51%, to $1.0328.

The Japanese yen rose 0.11% to 151.31 dollars per dollar.

The dollar fell 0.36%, to $1.2389.

The Mexican peso fell 0.58% against the dollar to 20.593.

The Canadian dollar fell 0.06% against the greenback, to C$1.43 a dollar.

Bitcoin gained 1.08% in value to $97,865.00. Ethereum fell 0.55% to 2,693.98.

The oil prices barely increased, but they were still on course for their third weekly decline in a row due to the tariff concerns.

U.S. crude climbed 0.06%, to $70.64 per barrel. Brent rose 0.05% to $74.33 a barrel.

The safe-haven gold resumed its upward climb after renewed trade worries added to the luster of the metal.

Spot gold increased by 0.13%, to $2860.22 per ounce. U.S. Gold Futures increased 0.47% to an ounce of $2,869.50.

(source: Reuters)