The FTSE 100 was down and US stocks were up on Friday, after a rocky first few days of the year, as US non-farm payroll data beat expectations.
Ahead of the data, investors had been paring their bets that central banks will look to push ahead with earlier than expected interest rate cuts.
London’s flagship index (^FTSE) was down 0.4% by the end of the session, while Frankfurt’s DAX (^GDAXI) was up 0.2% and the CAC (^FCHI) in Paris fell 0.2%. The Stoxx 600 (^STOXX) was down 0.1%.
US non-farm payrolls are a closely watched set of data which guides US Federal Reserve thinking on its interest rate path.
Payroll gains were 216,000, while estimates had pointed to an increase of 171,000 in December from 199,000 in November.
Growth over the past few months has been affected by strike action to the tune of approximately 30,000.
Meanwhile, unemployment flatlined at 3.7%. The unemployment rate was expected to have ticked up a tenth to 3.8%. Wages, which were forecast to remain steady at 0.3% m/m and 3.9% y/y, were up 0.3% month-on-month.
After the opening bell, the S&P 500 (^GSPC) was up 0.6%, the Dow (^DJI) rose 0.3% and the Nasdaq (^IXIC) rose 0.7%.
Numbers released on Thursday also suggested the US’s economy and labour market are resilient.
Read more: FTSE 100 bosses earn UK average salary in just three days
Endeavour Mining (EDV.L) was the stock to watch on Friday, dragging the FTSE down with a 12% fall as markets opened in London, following the ouster of CEO Sébastien de Montessus for serious misconduct. By the closing bell it was still down 6.4%.
The miner said this followed an investigation into an irregular payment instruction issued by De Montessus. The payment totalled $5.9m (£4.67m), and was in relation to an asset disposal undertaken by the company (more on this in the blog).
Meanwhile, new data has shown UK footfall took a beating in December, due to rainy weather deterring shoppers. The British Retail Consortium’s (BRC) IQ data showed a 5% decline year-on-year in December, compounding a 0.7% fall in November.
The fall also reflects the fact that December 2022 saw pent up demand for in-person shopping following pandemic shutdowns, the BRC said.
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