Latest News

Dollar extends recent gains as stocks climb on tech share rebound

The stock indexes rose on Wednesday, as the dollar continued to rise and U.S. payrolls data came in stronger than expected. According to a survey of economists, the U.S. private sector payrolls increased by 42,000 in October. This was more than double what most expected. Some industries, such as professional services, have lost jobs for the third consecutive month. Private payroll data is closely scrutinized in light of the U.S. shutdown and the ongoing concerns about the weakness of the labor market. U.S. president Donald Trump has again asked Republican senators in an effort to end the longest government shut down in history to stop the filibuster.

After a sharp drop on Tuesday, the semiconductor index rose 2.5%. Advanced Micro Devices shares rose 0.5% following a positive revenue forecast given by the company on Tuesday.

Peter Cardillo is the chief market economist of Spartan Capital Securities, based in New York.

He said that the ADP numbers suggested that if they aligned with the official figures - when finally released - that the fears over the job market might have been overstated.

He said that the possibility that the U.S. government shutdown will end adds to the optimism.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average grew 59.92, or 0.12% to 47,139.89. The S&P 500 climbed 28.01, or 0.41% to 6,799.59. And the Nasdaq Composite grew 149.16, or 0.64% to 23,498.37. The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 1.48 points or 0.15 percent to 998.31. The pan-European STOXX 600 rose by 0.38%.

Asia stocks took a heavy hit overnight. The Nikkei 225 index in Japan fell nearly 7% at one point from its record highs on Tuesday. Shares in South Korea dropped as much as 6,2%, before recovering some of their losses to fall by 2.9%. The global stock market has been swept by a wave of enthusiasm for generative artificial Intelligence this year. It's been compared to the dotcom boom. Since last week, when the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates by 25 basis point and Fed Chair Jerome Powell stated that a December rate cut was not predetermined, the dollar has strengthened against the euro.

The euro fell 0.04% to $1.1477. The dollar gained 0.38% against the Japanese yen to reach 154.26.

After recovering from its earlier losses, the leading cryptocurrency Bitcoin gained 3.25% and reached $103,565.86. It fell 6.1% to $99,000 on Tuesday, the lowest level since June 22. The yields on U.S. Treasury bonds rose after economic data showed that the economy is still resilient.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. notes increased 5.4 basis points from late Tuesday to 4.145%.

Gold prices increased. Gold spot rose 1.26%, to $3981.49 per ounce. U.S. crude dropped 0.38% to 60.33 per barrel. Brent was down to $64.27 a barrel, a 0.26% drop on the day.

(source: Reuters)