
US stock indexes edged higher on Thursday after shaking off early morning weakness tied to mixed labor market signals and cautious investor positioning ahead of Friday’s employment report.
The S&P 500 recovered from small opening losses to trade just barely positive, while the Dow led the session with a 0.6% gain, buoyed by rotations into defensive and cyclical names outside technology.
The rebound reflects investor resilience rather than conviction, with breadth remaining cautious as traders await the January nonfarm payroll report due on Friday at 8:30 AM.
US market rebound led by tech, breadth remains cautious
The morning selloff faded as buyers stepped in, particularly in industrials, financials, and discretionary stocks that had lagged during the technology-led rally.
The Dow’s outperformance, up roughly 0.6% midday, contrasted sharply with the Nasdaq composite, which traded essentially flat as mega-cap technology names struggled to hold ground.
Market breadth painted a mixed picture: advancers barely outnumbered decliners as traders rotated away from concentrated positions in Magnificent Seven stocks that have driven the bulk of 2025’s gains.
The Russell 2000 small-cap index, meanwhile, climbed toward record territory, suggesting institutional investors were diversifying away from tech concentration.
VIX volatility, the fear gauge, held steady around 15.2, elevated for an early-year Friday but not signaling capitulation or panic selling.
This measured tone contrasts sharply with Thursday’s sharp rotations into defense stocks on Trump’s $1.5 trillion military budget announcement.
Sector performance underscored the rotation: Palo Alto Networks bounced 1.8% on M&A speculation amid a cybersecurity consolidation wave.
Gap Inc. surged 2.8% after a UBS upgrade. Energy stocks, which had faltered on Venezuela oversupply concerns, stabilized as crude prices held firm.
Notably, financial stocks like JPMorgan and Bank of America inched higher alongside Treasury yields, reflecting investor expectations that the Fed may hold rates steady longer than initially priced in.
Macro watch: Bond yields, dollar, Fed commentary shape afternoon trade
The 10-year Treasury yield held steady around 4.14%–4.16%, having fallen 3 basis points from Wednesday’s highs as investors digested weak December job creation data (41,000 private-sector jobs via ADP vs. 50,000 forecast).
The 2-year yield sat at 3.48%, leaving the 10-2 yield curve spread at 0.68%, a modest positive slope signaling mild expectations for economic normalization rather than recession.
The dollar index ticked up to 98.80, hovering near four-week highs but struggling to break through the 99.00 resistance level.
The modest dollar strength, paired with stable yields, created a mixed backdrop for equities, not aggressively dollar-positive, but stable enough to keep Treasury buyers engaged.
Friday’s headline jobs report will determine afternoon market direction.
Consensus forecasts nonfarm payroll growth of 55000–60,000 in December, down sharply from prior months as the economy faces labor headwinds.
A miss could trigger a rally in bonds and equities on Fed easing bets.
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