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The US jobs report and signs of an easing in trade tensions have led to a rise in world stocks.

Wall Street and European shares rallied, and U.S. Treasury Yields surged Friday as investors' risk appetite was boosted by a positive employment report and indications that China is willing to negotiate tariffs.

The three major U.S. indexes all advanced by more than 1% in the session. Financials, transports, and microchips, which are sensitive to the economy, outperformed the overall market.

The three indexes all rose this week.

The S&P 500 has posted nine consecutive sessions of gains. This is its longest winning streak since over twenty years.

According to the Labor Department's report, the U.S. economy created more jobs last month than was expected, and wage inflation was below consensus. This prompted a rise in U.S. Treasury benchmark yields.

Paul Nolte is a senior wealth advisor and market strategist with Murphy & Sylvest, located in Elmhurst. He said, "The jobs data was very positive; it shows that the economy's doing well." "There is still discussion about the impact of tariffs but, so far, this data hasn't shown up in many of the numbers."

China's Commerce Ministry announced that Beijing was evaluating Washington’s offer to have talks about President Donald Trump’s crippling tariffs. This could signal a possible de-escalation in the market-shaking trade war.

Jed Ellerbroek is a portfolio manager with Argent Capital Management, St. Louis. He said that both China and the U.S. were taking small but consistent steps towards negotiation and reconciliation. "It seems the spiraling-out-of-control phase ended."

Ellerbroek said that "the market doesn't believe the current tariffs will last very long."

The latest quarterly earnings report shows that the lack of clarity surrounding U.S. China trade duties contributed to a marked decline in long-term expectations for U.S. companies.

Apple and Amazon.com released their quarterly earnings on Thursday night with disappointing estimates, including Apple’s estimated $900,000,000 in tariff costs. These reports have taken some of the wind out of the sails for the Magnificent 7 group of megacap stocks related to artificial intelligence, which enjoyed a recovery this week.

General Motors has warned that earnings will be hit by $4-5 billion dollars and American Airlines has withdrawn its profit forecasts.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 564.47, or 1.39 %, to 41.317.33, the S&P 500 gained 82.49, or 1.47 %, to 5,686.63 while the Nasdaq Composite climbed 266.99, or 1.51% to 17,977.73.

European shares surged as investors regained confidence after a busy week of earnings, fueled by renewed hopes for Sino-U.S. Trade Negotiations and strong employment data.

The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 13.23 points or 1.58% to 848.38.

The pan-European STOXX 600 Index rose 1.67% while Europe's broad FTSEurofirst 300 Index rose 36.55 point, or 1.75%.

Emerging market stocks increased by 23.83 points or 2.14% to 1,135.80. MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan closed up by 2.44% to 595.08 while Japan's Nikkei gained 378.39 or 1.04% to 36,830.69.

Treasury yields increased as investors reduced their bets that the Federal Reserve would cut rates in June due to strong employment numbers.

The yield on the benchmark U.S. 10 year notes increased 7.7 basis points from 4.231% to 4.308% late Thursday.

The 30-year bond rate rose by 5.2 basis points, from 4.737% to 4.7889% late 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 12.5 basis points, to 3.826% from 3.701%, late Thursday.

Dollar dropped in wake of positive U.S. employment report.

The dollar index (which measures the greenback in relation to a basket of currencies, including the yen, the euro and others) fell by 0.14%, while the euro rose 0.12%, reaching $1.1304.

The dollar fell 0.3% against the Japanese yen to 144.99.

Crude continued to fall as investors positioned ahead of a decision expected by OPEC+ boosting output.

U.S. crude dropped 1.60%, settling at $58.29 a barrel. Brent, however, settled at $61.29 a barrel, down by 1.35%.

The gold price reversed gains earlier and was headed for a loss of a week amid eased trade tensions.

Spot gold dropped 0.24% to $3232.60 per ounce. U.S. Gold Futures increased 0.47% to an ounce of $3,225.00.

(source: Reuters)