Dow Futures Rise 205 Pts; Nonfarm Payrolls in Focus By Investing.com


© Reuters

By Peter Nurse

Investing.com — U.S. stocks are seen opening higher Friday, rebounding after the previous session’s Federal Reserve-inspired losses ahead of the release of the crucial October jobs report.

At 07:00 ET (11:00 GMT), the contract was up 205 points, or 0.6%, traded 30 points, or 0.8%, higher, and climbed 95 points, or 0.9%.

The main equity indices closed lower Thursday after the raised interest rates by a hefty 75 basis points again and made it clear there were more increases needed to tame , dashing hopes that it was nearing an end to its aggressive rate hikes.

The blue-chip fell just short of 150 points, or 0.5%, while the broad-based dropped 1.1%, and the tech-heavy slumped 1.7%.

All three indices are on course to post a losing week. Before Friday’s open, the Dow was down 2.6%, the S&P down 4.6%, and the Nasdaq 6.8% lower, set for its worst weekly performance since January.

Attention now turns to the release of the October employment report, at 08:30 ET (12:30 GMT), which should offer more clues over how the economy is progressing, and how much work the Fed has to do to bring down inflation.

Analysts are expecting that the economy added 200,000 last month, which would be down from 263,000 the prior month, while , an important inflation gauge, is seen rising 0.3% on the month, unchanged from the prior month.

The quarterly corporate earnings season is set to continue, but with the bulk of tech earnings now over, next week sees the turn of the major retailers to provide more clarity on their outlooks this season.

Ahead of that, the candy maker Hershey (NYSE:), electric utility giant Duke Energy (NYSE:), and entertainment company AMC Networks (NASDAQ:) are scheduled to report Friday.

Additionally, Block (NYSE:) stock soared 14% premarket after the payments platform posted a rise in revenue late Thursday, helped by growth of its online payments service Cash App.

On the flip side, Carvana (NYSE:) stock fell 7% premarket after the online used car seller disappointed with its third-quarter , citing weakening demand for used cars after a surge of interest during the pandemic.

Oil prices rose Friday, helped by an easing and fresh rumors that China plans to scale back COVID-related restrictions.

’ numbers on operational U.S. oil rigs as well as will be studied later in the session, while traders also await news on the potential passing of a price cap on Russian exports by Western powers. This is a plan aimed at squeezing funding to Moscow without cutting supply to consumers.

By 07:00 ET, futures traded 3.3% higher at $91.08 a barrel, while the contract rose 2.9% to $97.38.

Both benchmarks are on course to post a positive week, with supply seen as tight, illustrated by falling U.S. crude stockpiles, even as recession fears raise demand concerns.

Additionally, rose 1.4% to $1,653.45/oz, while traded 0.4% higher at 0.9792.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*