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January's jobs report surged past expectations and marked a strong start to the year following a weak year of job growth.

Nonfarm payrolls were expected to increase by 55,000 in January while the unemployment rate held at 4.4%, according to the Dow Jones consensus estimate.

Following the "aggressive" selloff seen in the software names, Kevin Green points to Cloudflare's (NET) surge higher after an earnings beat as a potential boon for the overall group. Meanwhile, Shopify (SHOP) is also enjoying "a nice move to the upside" says KG as he breaks down the company's AI initiatives and goes inside its earnings report.

Bullish momentum reinforced by politics: The Nikkei 225 extended its rally from the 6 February reversal low, supported by PM Takaichi's snap election victory and a decisive parliamentary supermajority, making it the top-performing major global index over the past two sessions (+2.3%). Stronger yen not derailing equities: Despite USD/JPY falling on intervention fears, Japanese equities held firm.

The US Labour Department is set to release closely watched employment data on Wednesday, offering the first indication of whether job growth in 2026 is gaining momentum after a year marked by the weakest hiring pace outside of a recession in more than two decades.

US futures were modestly positive in early morning trading on Wednesday, with the market waiting for the delayed January non-farm payrolls report. Unless the jobs data upsets the apple cart, the Dow Jones is set to make further steps into record territory, with futures up 0.1%.

We are at a critical market rotation point, with value stocks outperforming growth as cyclical sectors gain leadership. Alpha is shifting to energy, industrials, basic materials, and select cyclicals, while Big Tech faces disruption and valuation headwinds.

Nasdaq and S&P 500 sit near key levels while US stocks await NFP revisions and notable premarket movers signal shifting sentiment for traders.

Days after investors of software firms were spooked by the launch of plugins by Anthropic's Claude, shares of wealth management and brokerage firms tumbled after financial-technology company Altruist unveiled an AI tool capable of automating personalised tax strategies, triggering fears that AI could erode the relevance of traditional financial services.

The Fed says the job market is stabilizing. Today's jobs report could show otherwise.

Hyperscalers like Alphabet, Meta, and Oracle are shifting from cash-rich to leveraging debt to fund unprecedented AI-driven capex cycles. By 2026, AI-related capex among top hyperscalers could surpass $700 billion, fueling record investment-grade debt issuance.

The Dow Jones Index futures continued soaring today, February 11, as traders waited for key macro data from the United States and corporate earnings from top companies. It also rallied as Benjamin Netanyahu arrived in Washington to press for war and regime change in Iran.

Morgan Stanley strategists offer criteria on how to find the AI winners, saying the market is starting to demand proof of return on equity.

The European Commission has imposed additional duties on imported electric vehicles made in China since 2024, though under European Union rules carmakers can now negotiate tariff exemptions for individual electric models imported from China.

The most oversold stocks in the communication services sector presents an opportunity to buy into undervalued companies.

As the S&P 500 seeks to claim the 7,000 record high, insights from a trading expert suggest the benchmark index could be headed for a correction in the coming months.

The latest jobs data, to be released on Wednesday, will shed light on how the labor market is faring, with vast implications for the Federal Reserve's plans for interest rates.

Man Group has announced a partnership with Anthropic to use the AI start-up's suite of enterprise tools. Anthropic Chief Commercial Officer Paul Smith spoke to Arjun Kharpal about the partnership, hyperbole in the markets and capex plans.

UK wealth management stocks St James's Place and Quilter fell sharply on Wednesday, as concerns over potential disruption from artificial intelligence spread to the broader European financial sector, following a steep selloff in U.S. rival stocks.

Futures tied to U.S. blue-chip indexes rose and the dollar fell as investors look to Wednesday's nonfarm payrolls report for clues on potential Fed rate cuts.