Stocks set another record and yields leap on signals the U.S. economy is solid

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U.S. stocks climbed further into record heights Thursday after a report showed the U.S. job market looks stronger than Wall Street expected.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 51.93 points, or 0.8%, to 6,279.35 and set an all-time high for the fourth time in five days. The Dow Jones industrial average added 344.41 points, or 0.8%, to 44,828.53. The Nasdaq composite gained 207.97, or 1%, to 20,601.10.
The market’s gains were widespread, and companies whose profits can get the biggest boosts when workers are feeling confident helped lead the way. Expedia climbed 3.2%, and Norwegian Cruise Line steamed 2.9% higher.
Bank stocks were also strong, with Citigroup up 2.3%, and JPMorgan Chase up 1.9%.
The reaction was bigger in the bond market after the report from the U.S. government, which said employers added 147,000 more jobs to their payrolls last month than they cut. The unexpected acceleration in hiring signals the U.S. job market is holding up despite worries about how President Trump’s tariffs may hurt the economy and inflation.
“There is nothing to complain about here,” according to Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency Economics. “You cannot find any evidence of a nascent recession in these figures.”
A separate report, meanwhile, said fewer U.S. workers applied for unemployment benefits last week, an indication of easing layoffs.
Yields jumped in the bond market as investors bet the better-than-expected data could keep the Federal Reserve on hold when it comes to interest rates, instead of cutting them as Trump has loudly been calling for.
Traders in the futures market now see a less than 5% chance that the Fed could cut its main interest rate at its next meeting later this month. That’s down sharply from the nearly 24% chance they saw just a day earlier, according to data from CME Group.
The Fed’s chair, Jerome H. Powell, has been insisting that he wants to wait to see how Trump’s tariffs affect the economy and inflation before making its next move. Although lower rates give a boost to the economy by making it easier to borrow money, they also can give inflation more fuel. And that could be dangerous if Trump’s tariffs are about to send inflation higher.
Many of Trump’s stiff proposed taxes on imports are currently on pause, but they’re scheduled to begin next week unless the president reaches deals with other countries to lower them.
Many U.S. companies in the services industries are saying they’re concerned about the effects of tariffs, even if they returned to growth last month after May’s contraction, according to the most recent survey by the Institute for Supply Management.
“Increased cost from tariffs and the potential for tariffs is impacting cost increases,” one company in the agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting industry said in the survey.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 4.34% from 4.30% late Wednesday. The two-year Treasury yield, which moves more closely with expectations for the Fed, jumped even more. It climbed to 3.88% from 3.78%.
On Wall Street, Datadog rallied 14.9% after learning that its stock will join the widely followed S&P 500 index before trading begins Wednesday. Many managers of funds either directly mimic or at least compare themselves against the S&P 500, which drives investment into any stock that joins the index.
Datadog will replace Juniper Networks, which combined with Hewlett Packard Enterprise in a merger.
On the losing side of Wall Street were companies that can feel pain from interest rates staying high.
Homebuilders would like rates to fall in order to make mortgages cheaper to get, for example, and Lennar sank 4.1%, while D.R. Horton dropped 2.7%.
In stock markets abroad, indexes rose across much of Europe and Asia. South Korea’s Kospi climbed 1.3%, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 0.6% for two of the bigger moves.
Choe writes for the Associated Press.
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