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Stocks pull back from record highs after jobs report

After reaching record highs Thursday, markets leveled off Friday in response to lower-than-forecast job growth.
After reaching record highs Thursday, markets leveled off Friday in response to lower-than-forecast job growth.
(Mario Tama / Getty Images)
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U.S. stocks fell from their record heights Friday after a report showed hiring last month was a touch weaker than expected.

Employers added 145,000 jobs across the country in December, short of the 160,000 that economists forecast. But the growth was solid enough to bolster Wall Street’s view that the job market is holding up and households can continue to spend, preserving the largest part of the economy. The bond market also rallied after the report showed workers’ wages aren’t rising much, which lessens the threat of inflation.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 9.35 points, or 0.3%, to 3,265.35 from the record high it set Thursday. Still, the S&P 500 notched a 0.9% gain for the week.

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The Dow Jones industrial average briefly topped 29,000 points for the first time, but it ended at 28,823.77, down 133.13, or 0.5%, for the day. The Nasdaq composite fell 24.57, or 0.3%, to 9,178.86.

“I don’t think today’s [jobs] report was a big needle mover for the market or for Fed policy,” said Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab. “The economic environment looks fine in 2020, but the risk is that sentiment may have gotten overly complacent, and we need earnings to step up.”

Earnings reports will begin in earnest next week, with JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and other big banks scheduled to tell investors how much profit they made in the last three months of 2019. Many will also give forecasts for 2020.

Companies across the S&P 500 have been able to squeeze plenty of profit from each $1 in revenue because wages for their workers aren’t rising very quickly, even when the unemployment rate is at a half-century low.

Average hourly earnings for workers were 2.9% higher in December than a year earlier, Friday’s jobs report showed. That’s the weakest growth since July 2018.

Stubbornly low wage growth isn’t good for workers, but it removes a threat of higher inflation that could erode corporate profits and push the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates. Markets see low rates as fuel for markets, and the Fed’s three rate cuts last year were a big reason for the surge in stocks.

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After the jobs report, the yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 1.82% from 1.85%. Treasury yields fall when their prices rise.

Falling rates can pressure banks by limiting the amount of profit they make on mortgages and other loans, and financial stocks in the S&P 500 alone accounted for about a third of the index’s loss. JPMorgan Chase shares fell 1%. Bank of America shares slipped 0.8%.

Six Flags Entertainment plunged 17.8% after the theme park operator warned investors that it may have to have to nix development plans in China after its partner in the country defaulted on payments. It also said it expects to report a drop in revenue for the latest quarter.

In commodities trading, benchmark U.S. oil fell 52 cents to settle at $59.04 a barrel. Brent crude, the international standard, fell 39 cents to $64.98 a barrel.

Wholesale gasoline rose 1 cent to $1.66 a gallon. Heating oil fell 2 cents to $1.93 a gallon. Natural gas rose 3 cents to $2.20 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Gold rose $5.80 to $1,557.50 an ounce. Silver rose 17 cents to $18.03 an ounce. Copper rose 1 cent to $2.82 a pound.

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The dollar rose to 109.54 Japanese yen from 109.52 yen on Monday. The euro rose to $1.1122 from $1.1106.

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