On Friday, the three major U.S. stock indices opened higher collectively. The Nasdaq Composite advanced 1.22%, continuing to set a new all-time high. Leading technology stocks broadly gained, with Advanced Micro Devices (AMD.US) and Intel (INTC.US) rising over 6%, Tesla (TSLA.US) climbing more than 4%, Apple (AAPL.US) and NVIDIA (NVDA.US) increasing over 2%, while Amazon (AMZN.US) and Google (GOOGL.US) gained nearly 1%.
According to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, nonfarm payrolls increased by 115,000 in April. Although this represents a significant decline from the exceptionally strong 185,000 jobs added in March, it substantially exceeded market expectations of 65,000. This marks the first time in nearly a year that U.S. job growth has expanded for two consecutive months.
The unemployment rate remained unchanged at 4.3% for the second consecutive month, further indicating that only modest employment growth is needed to maintain labor market stability amid limited labor force expansion.
Economist Anna Wong noted that April's hiring performance was unexpectedly robust, yet the unemployment rate rose. This combination suggests that the pace of job growth required to keep the unemployment rate stable may be higher than the near-zero growth level previously estimated by the Federal Reserve.
The most noteworthy detail in the April employment report came from the freight transportation industry, which contributed over half of the month's new jobs. This corroborates recent improvement signals from PMI data and regional Federal Reserve manufacturing surveys, suggesting the industrial sector may be embarking on a strong recovery.
Wong stated that this report does not alter her judgment regarding the federal funds rate path. "The Federal Reserve is still expected to keep interest rates unchanged until the fourth quarter, at which point, as the unemployment rate climbs, we anticipate a 50 basis point rate cut."
Comments