Daily market snapshot

Published December 4, 2024
 Woman on couch looking at laptop

Wednesday, 12/4/2024 a.m.

  • Stocks open higher, with jobs data in focus: Equity markets are moving higher on Wednesday morning, with labor-market data in focus. The ADP private-employment survey showed private employers added 146,000 jobs in November, representing healthy job growth, but it was below the October reading of 184,000.* Equity-market leadership is narrow in early trading, with technology and consumer discretionary the top-performing sectors of the S&P 500, while most other sectors are opening flat to lower.* Overseas, European markets are trading mostly higher despite ongoing political uncertainty in France, while Asian markets were mixed overnight. On the corporate front, shares of Salesforce are higher by over 8% in early trading following the company's earnings results after the market close yesterday, which showed sales for the quarter were slightly better than analysts expected.* Bond yields are ticking higher today, with the 10-year Treasury yield hovering around 4.26% and the 2-year yield rising to 4.2%.* Later this morning will provide a read on economic growth trends in the services sector of the U.S. economy with the release of the ISM services PMI for November.
  • Jobs data in focus this week: A busy week of labor-market data continued today with the release of the ADP Employment survey for November. Today's report showed private employers added 146,000 jobs in November, modestly below expectations for a gain of 158,000 and below last month's downwardly revised reading of 184,000.* Economically sensitive segments of the economy showed the weakest job growth, with manufacturing jobs contracting by 26,000 and small businesses (those with between 1-50 employees) shedding 17,000 jobs.** Meanwhile, large establishments (those with 500+ employees) and services industries, such as education and health services, produced the strongest gains.** Today's report follows yesterday's better-than-expected JOLTS job openings report, which showed job openings increased to 7.7 million in October, 372,000 higher than the prior month and the biggest monthly increase in more than a year.* We'd view this week's data as evidence that labor-market conditions continue to normalize from historically tight levels but remain healthy overall. Perhaps this week's most anticipated release will be the November nonfarm-payrolls report on Friday. Market expectations are for nonfarm payrolls to rise by 215,000, well above the prior month's reading of 12,000, which was negatively impacted by the Boeing machinist strike and hurricanes Helene and Milton.* The unemployment rate is expected to remain unchanged at 4.1%.*
  • Overseas politics in focus: Overseas politics remain in the headlines, with the French Prime Minister Michel Barnier facing a no-confidence vote after attempting to push through amendments to the budget without seeking parliamentary approval.* If the no-confidence vote succeeds, a new prime minister would need to be appointed, and the government would be forced to rely on emergency financial measures to roll over government spending limits from 2024 until a new budget is created.* The political uncertainty has surfaced mainly through bond markets, with the spread between the 10-year French and 10-year German government bond yields rising to its highest in more than 10 years, reflecting the uncertain outcome in France.* French equity markets are looking through the turbulence, with the CAC index moving higher today.* In addition to the uncertainty in France, the South Korean president declared martial law before subsequently reversing the order and now faces the possibility of impeachment. The Korean KOSPI Index finished sharply lower overnight in response to the instability.*

Brock Weimer, CFA
Investment Strategy

Source: *FactSet **ADP Private Employment Report for November

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