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US equities advanced on Friday after a stronger-than-expected April jobs report reinforced confidence in the resilience of the labor market. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 208 points, or 0.4%, while the S&P 500 gained about 0.5% and the Nasdaq Composite advanced roughly 0.6%.

Job creation was better than expected in April, as the U.S. labor market continued to defy expectations for a slowdown this year, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday. CNBC's Rick Santelli has the details.

One of the commonly stated reasons why companies stay private is the costs (and legal risks) of being public. One of those costs is preparing quarterly SEC reports. But there are also costs of preparing for and going public. Underwriting dominates the total costs of going public. It also scales with the size of the IPO.
The market rally is driven by concentrated gains in semiconductors and AI-adjacent stocks, but breadth remains weak and rotation is likely. Economic re-acceleration, boosted by AI spending and fiscal stimulus, is evident in rising leading indicators and business lending.
The labor market exceeded expectations in April with gains of 115,000 jobs. The monthly jobs report marked a return to trend following two months of relative skew from the health care sector.
The US and Iran clashed near the Strait of Hormuz, putting a fragile ceasefire under new strain. The skirmishes risk undermining talks over a US-proposed deal to permanently end the war, with Iran expected to respond soon.

PGIM Fixed Income Executive Portfolio Advisor Michael Collins says this April jobs report locks in a stalemate at the Federal Reserve and means they are on hold for now. He speaks on "Bloomberg Surveillance.

Private-sector payrolls rose by 109,000 in April, the payroll processing firm ADP reported on Wednesday, surpassing projections for 107,500. That's the most in a single month since March 2025, as education and health services once again accounted for most of April's job growth, adding 61,000 roles.

US employers added 115,000 jobs in April, marking the first back-to-back advance in nearly a year, and the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 4.3%. Bloomberg's Michael McKee has our first read on the report.

Immediately following an April jobs report that checked in better than expected, Ben Emons joins the Schwab Network set at the NYSE to break down the numbers. He says "this is a great report" and that the economy "is really showing us this on the move growth.

Wall Street traders are embracing a new market catchphrase as investors increasingly lose confidence that tensions in the Strait of Hormuz will ease in the near future. The latest acronym making the rounds on trading desks is “NACHO” — short for “Not A Chance Hormuz Opens” — a term that reflects growing doubts that repeated statements by US President Donald Trump about reopening the critical shipping corridor will translate into a durable peace agreement.

The U.S. economy added jobs at a modest pace last month according to the Labor Department's April 2026 jobs report that was released on Friday.

S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures rise as traders watch Iran tensions, tech earnings, and key US jobs data for clues on the stock market outlook.

The April jobs report came in better than expected, with 115,000 new jobs added to the U.S. economy and unemployment holding steady at 4.3%.

Federal Reserve Board of Governor's member Stephen Miran joins 'Mornings with Maria' to break down rare Fed dissent, push for rate cuts and weigh in on President Donald Trump's incoming Fed chair Kevin Warsh as economic pressures mount. 0:00 – The Fed's Historic Division & Powell's Exit 1:08 – Why I Dissent: The Case for Lower Interest Rates 4:22 – Kevin Warsh vs.

Hiring was surprisingly strong in April for the second month in a row, signaling the labor market may be withstanding pressures from higher energy costs amid the Iran war for now.

HubSpot's guidance is too soft for analysts as the market continues to be rattled by fears over AI disruption.

Unemployment remained steady at 4.3% as the US-Israel war on Iran continues to rattle the American economy

The U.S. added 115,000 jobs in April, the Labor Department said Friday, far exceeding expectations.

Nonfarm payrolls were expected to increase by 55,000 in April, according to the Dow Jones consensus.