Itâs payrolls day, the US is monitoring a suspected Chinese surveillance balloon and big tech firms are hitting troubled waters. â David Goo
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Itâs payrolls day, the US is monitoring a suspected Chinese surveillance balloon and big tech firms are hitting troubled waters. â [David Goodman]( Payrolls Day After a week of central bank action, the marketâs attention is now focused on today's nonfarm payrolls report. Hiring likely [continued to moderate]( in January, although still-solid wage growth, an unemployment rate near historical lows and high vacancies are seen stiffening the Federal Reserveâs resolve to keep rates elevated for some time. Payrolls growth is forecast to have slowed to 189,000 from 223,000 in December, while unemployment may have ticked up to 3.6% from 3.5%. Meanwhile, US employers in January announced the [most job cuts]( since 2020, according to data compiled by Challenger, Gray & Christmas.
Spy balloon The Pentagon is [tracking]( what it said was a Chinese surveillance balloon over sensitive nuclear sites in the western US, an incident that injected new strain into relations before a planned Beijing visit by Secretary of State Antony Blinken. The balloon was first spotted earlier this week and had been hanging over Montana, where Minuteman III intercontinental-ballistic-missile silos are located, a senior Defense Department official said. Hereâs the rundown of [what you need to know](. Tech woes [Apple](, [Amazon]( and [Alphabet](, technology giants with a combined market value approaching $5 trillion, posted a set of troublesome results Thursday, showing the economic slowdown is [throttling demand]( for electronics, e-commerce, cloud computing and digital advertising. Thatâs left Nasdaq futures pointing lower this morning, although that [might not trouble Cathie Wood](, founder and chief executive officer of ARK Investment Management. She told Bloomberg her flagship fund now gives investors better exposure to long-term innovation than most of the marketâs most popular growth stock benchmarks. âWe are the new Nasdaq,â she said. Futures drop The pessimism looks set to extend beyond the Nasdaq, with all [US equity futures]( signaling a lower open. Markets were more muted in Europe as stocks and bonds only gave back some of Thursdayâs huge rallies. The dollar was flat and an index of commodities fell for a third day. To catch up on the trading day in the UK and Europe, [check out todayâs edition of Markets Today.]( Coming up⦠The payrolls data will be released at 8:30 a.m. in Washington, followed by a couple of services reports later in the day. Later, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly speaks in an interview on Fox Business/ Meanwhile, after a busy week, the relentless pace of earnings slows right down. What weâve been reading Hereâs what caught our eye over the past 24 hours: - A cyberattack sends [derivatives trading back to the 1980s](
- [Gautam Adani's $108 billion crisis]( shakes investors' faith in India
- Ex-Goldman President Schwartz is the [top contender to lead Carlyle](
- [The creators of âAssassin's Creed']( are clinging to family control
- The world's top pension fund suffers [longest losing streak in 20 years](
- Crypto Miner Marathon Digital [sells Bitcoin holdings]( for the first time And finally, hereâs what Garfieldâs interested in this morning Central banks in the US, Europe and the UK all raised interest rates to fresh multi-year highs, while signaling there is more tightening to come plus a willingness to hold policy at restrictive levels for a long time. Bond investors responded by piling in to bets that policymakers will soon start cutting borrowing costs. The International Monetary Fund was among those warning the battle between markets and central banks could cause pain for both economies and investors by counteracting policymakersâ efforts to restrain growth in order to curb cost pressures. Part of the problem is that the Fed is starting to sound less hawkish than before. Chair Jerome Powellâs speech palpably failed to offer the pushback against the pivot narrative that heavyweight bond investor Jeffrey Gundlach for one was expecting. Ray Dalio of Bridgewater Associates, told markets to pay heed to Powellâs warnings about higher rates even after the press conference, but few seemed to listen. Financial advisers felt the need to warn clients against Fed FOMO. Itâs also possible that the record shorts hedge funds had placed against Treasuries helped boost this weekâs rallies. Given that background, even the European Central Bankâs relatively hawkish moves â raising rates by half a point and making it clear another step-up would come next month â made barely a splash. Investors are becoming ever more convinced each hike is just bringing the world closer to the day when central banks will again act to ensure asset prices stay elevated. The fact that similar bets last year on imminent rate cuts went awry is also being set to one side. One of last yearâs top-performing bond funds is again positioning for a sell-off in 2023, figuring other investors are wrong in their pivot optimism. There are also some investors for whom the pivot question is well and truly moot â US defined-benefit pension funds sitting on their biggest surplus for two decades. Emerging-market investors were simply relieved Powell seemed pleased with the progress made on inflation. A key driver for bond investorsâ conviction may be the growing signs of distress in the worldâs highly-leveraged housing markets â the sort of development that usually means a slowdown is coming for economies. Data in the coming days will offer plenty of tests for the pivot thesis, starting with Fridayâs US payrolls, and continuing with US January inflation and retail sales figures due in mid-February.  Follow Us You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Five Things to Start Your Day: Americas Edition newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, [sign up here]( to get it in your inbox.
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