Australian Share Market Set to Fall on Wall Street Weakness and Strong Jobs Data

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Australian Share Market Set to Fall on Wall Street Weakness and Strong Jobs Data
AUSTRALIAN MARKETWALLSTREETJOBS DATA
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The Australian share market is poised for a decline on Monday, influenced by Wall Street's Friday slump and anticipation of strong Australian unemployment figures. The S&P ASX 200 futures are down 0.86%, mirroring the US market's concerns about sustained inflation and interest rates.

The Australian share market is set to fall on Monday morning following a weak lead from Wall Street on Friday and anticipation among traders that Thursday’s unemployment figures could be stronger than expected. Futures for the S&P ASX 200 showed a drop of 0.86 per cent, or 71 points, to 8208 after market open. The Australian dollar stayed flat over the weekend after sliding last week, currently trading at US61.5 cents.

\The Australian share market is set to fall on Monday morning following a weak lead from Wall Street on Friday and anticipation among traders that Thursday’s unemployment figures could be stronger than expected.On Friday, US stocks fell on worries that good news on the job market may be too good and prove to be bad for Wall Street by keeping inflation and interest rates high. The S&P 500 tumbled 1.5 per cent to close its fourth losing week in the last five. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 696 points, or 1.6 per cent, and the Nasdaq composite sank 1.6 per cent. Closer to home, traders are similarly concerned. Thursday marks the release of the ABS’ monthly employment data amid signs the labour market has not been easing as quickly as expected. \A strong jobs market could keep the Reserve Bank of Australia cautious about cutting interest rates, even as underlying inflation takes a convincing step down. Investors welcome low interest rates as they’re viewed as a catalyst for growth. Such strength in hiring is, of course, good news for workers looking for jobs. But it could also keep upward pressure on inflation by keeping the overall economy humming. In the US, the Fed has already indicated it’s likely to ease rates fewer times this year than expected because of worries about higher inflation. That’s partly because some officials are taking the possibility of tariffs seriously and other policies coming from President-elect Donald Trump that could worsen inflation. \To be sure, Friday’s jobs report may not be as strong as it seems on the surface. While the overall number of hires in December exceeded expectations, “manufacturing is still getting crushed,” said Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management. “The macroeconomy may be fine,” he said, “but each individual’s microeconomy could look very different.” The raises in pay that workers are getting are also an important data point for the Fed, and gains in average hourly earnings were below 4 per cent last month. That’s what “the Fed wants to see,” according to Wells Fargo Investment Institute Senior Global Market Strategist Scott Wren. The nuanced takes helped Treasury yields give back some of their initial bursts following the release of the jobs report. But preliminary results from a separate report later in the morning underscored the issue. It suggested US consumers are getting more pessimistic about where inflation is heading. The problem for Wall Street is that when traders were sending US stock indexes to dozens of records last year, they were banking on a stream of rate cuts coming from the Fed. If fewer cuts materialise than expected, stock prices would likely either need to fall, or profits at companies would have to rise more strongly to make up for it. Smaller companies can take worse hits from higher interest rates than their bigger rivals because of the need for many to borrow to grow. The Russell 2000 index of smaller stocks slumped 2.2 per cent. \Delta Air Lines was able to fly 9 per cent higher because it delivered a stronger profit report for the last three months of 2024 than analysts expected. The airline said it’s seeing strong demand for travel, which accelerated through the end of last year, and it expects that to continue into 2025. Big banks will begin reporting their own results for the end of 2024 next week, as earnings season gets under way in earnest. All told, the S&P 500 fell 91.21 points to 5,827.04. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 696.75 to 41,938.45, and the Nasdaq composite sank 317.25 to 19,161.63. In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury jumped to 4.76 per cent from 4.68 per cent late Thursday. In September, it was below 3.65 per cent, marking a major move for the bond market. Friday’s jobs report means traders see it as a near certainty that the Fed will not cut interest rates at its next meeting later this month. That would be the first time it’s stood pat following three straight cuts to interest rates. A growing minority of traders on Wall Street are saying the Fed may not cut rates again at all in 2025

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