Stock Market Today: Stocks higher with major jobs data in focus

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Check back for updates throughout the trading dayU.S. stocks turned higher in early Thursday trading, while Treasury yields and the dollar extended their recent run of declines, as investors looked to a key series of labor market data releases that are likely to define the Federal Reserve's autumn rate path.Updated at 9:47 AM EDTMixed openThe S&P 500 was marked 9 points, or 0.14% higher in the opening minutes of trading, with the Nasdaq up 103 points, or 0.61%, following a modestly positive reading for weekly jobless claims.The Dow, meanwhile, was down 92 points while the small cap Russel 2000 index was largely unchanged from last night's 2,146 point close.S&P 500 Opening Bell Heatmap (Sept. 05, 2024)$SPY +0.08%?$QQQ -0.10%?$DJI +0.02%?$IWM +0.01%? pic.twitter.com/FUlP3BHtiy— Wall St Engine (@wallstengine) September 5, 2024

Updated at 8:35 AM EDTSolid claims readingAround 227,000 Americans filed for jobless benefits last week, the Labor Department said, a modestly smaller-than-expected tally that was down 5,000 from the prior reporting period.Continuing claims, which track those who have already filed and are still receiving benefits, were also lower, falling by 22,000 to 1.838 million.Stock futures pared earlier declines following the Labor Department release, with the S&P 500 called 6 points lower and the Nasdaq priced for a 60 point decline.Unit Labor Costs very tame last four quarters pic.twitter.com/Y2Bpgur2K0— Mike Zaccardi, CFA, CMT ? (@MikeZaccardi) September 5, 2024

Updated at 8:23 AM EDTJobs slumpPayroll processing group ADP's National Employment report for the month of August was notably weaker than forecasts, with just 99,000 private sector hires.The group's July tally was revised lower, as well, to 111,000 from 122,000, while wage gains for job changers in August eased to a gain of 7.8%.  “The job market's downward drift brought us to slower-than-normal hiring after two years of outsized growth,” said chief economist Nela Richardson. “The next indicator to watch is wage growth, which is stabilizing after a dramatic post-pandemic slowdown.” Challenger Gray's August layoffs report, meanwhile, showed a 193% surge from July levels to 78,891, a tally that is also 1% higher from the same period last year. “Cuts are following a very similar trend from last year as ongoing pressures have challenged labor decisions,” said senior vice president Andrew Challenger.August ⁦@ChallengerGray⁩ Job Cuts +1% year/year vs. +9.2% prior … tech sector saw largest increase in cut announcements while food industry saw largest decrease pic.twitter.com/jycl5svIXk— Liz Ann Sonders (@LizAnnSonders) September 5, 2024

Updated at 6:25 AM EDTVerizon adds fiberVerizon Communications  (VZ)  revealed plans for a $20 billion takeover of Frontier Communications  (FYBR) , an all-cash deal that would rapidly expand the carrier's fiber-optic network.Verizon said it would pay $38.50 a share for Frontier, a 37% premium to the stock's price prior to report of a potential takeover in early September. Verizon shares were marked 0.75% higher in premarket trading at $41.79 each while Frontier slumped 9.5% to $35 each.

  Check back for updates throughout the trading dayStocks ended mixed Wednesday, with a pullback in tech stocks keeping the Nasdaq in negative territory for the quarter and a modest nudge higher in defensive stocks helping the Dow Jones Industrial Average eke out a meager 38-point gain. Big moves in the bond market, however, suggest traders are cementing their bets on autumn Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts, particularly after a weaker-than-expected reading for July job openings, which fell to the lowest levels since January 2021. The CME Group's FedWatch is pegging the odds of an outsized 50 basis point rate cut later this month in Washington at around 45%, and is pricing in at least a full percentage point of easing between now and the end of the year. Late Wednesday comments from San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly also solidified the case for policy easing, as she told Reuters that keeping rates too high for too long could lead to "additional slowing in the labor market, and to my mind, that would be unwelcome." 

A quartet of job market data over the next two sessions could define both the Fed's rate path and stock market direction into the autumn months.Shutterstock

Wall Street's focus is very likely to be focused on that very weakness today with layoff updates from Challenger Gray, ADP's national employment report and weekly jobless claims data from the Labor Department, all of which are set to arrive prior to the opening bell.Related: Fed rate cuts may not guarantee a September stock market rallyStock futures were mixed heading into the data releases, with the S&P 500 called 3 point lower and the Dow priced for a 10-point advance. The tech-focused Nasdaq is called 34 points lower.In the bond market, the yield differential between 2-year and 10-year notes was essentially flat for only the second time in more than two years, with both trading at 3.768% heading into the New York session.A normalizing of the so-called yield curve suggests investors are betting on a series of Fed rate cuts, which push 2-year yields lower, while also buying longer-date bonds as a defensive tactic against slowing economic growth. The US (2s-10s) yield curve is on the verge of dis-inverting.#economy #markets pic.twitter.com/qtYHIVCCUt— Mohamed A. El-Erian (@elerianm) September 4, 2024

In other markets, global oil prices booked modest gains following a report that the OPEC cartel is planning to delay increases to its collective output after crude hit a 14-month low on demand concerns earlier this week.WTI crude futures for October delivery, the U.S. benchmark which is tightly linked to gasoline prices, was last seen trading 68 cents higher on the session but still below $70 at $69.88 per barrel. More Wall Street Analysts:Analysts reboot Grand Theft Auto maker's stock price targetAmerican Express stock analyst flags concerning shift in consumer behaviorAnalyst resets Nvidia stock price target before earningsIn Europe, the regional Stoxx 600 benchmark edged 0.1% lower in early Frankfurt trading as markets eyed the spate of U.S. jobs data, while Britain's FTSE 100 rose 0.08%.Overnight in Asia, the Nikkei 225 fell another 1.05% in Tokyo as the yen rose to a one-month high against the U.S. dollar and held down gains for export stocks. The regionwide MSCI ex-Japan benchmark, meanwhile, was marked 0.33% higher heading into the close of trading.Related: Veteran fund manager sees world of pain coming for stocks

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