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

Here are five key things investors need to know to start the trading day.

8am: Futures point higher US stocks are set for a positive open on Friday, with futures pointing higher as Wall Street looks ahead to April's non-farm payrolls report, even as tensions in the Middle East flared overnight. Nasdaq futures are up 0.7%, S&P 500 futures have gained 0.5%, and Dow futures are 0.3% higher.

Miller Tabak's Matt Maley, Natixis' Chris Hodge and Bone Fide Wealth's Doug Boneparth discuss how earnings growth & the AI trade may be offsetting headlines surrounding the Iran war, and what to expect from today's jobs report.

AI-driven energy and compute bottlenecks threaten US productivity gains, as data center power demand projected to more than double by 2030. US energy production has stagnated, creating a 50% infrastructure deficit as AI demand surges, while China's energy capacity now far outpaces America's.

CNBC's Megan Cassella joins 'Squawk Box' with the latest news.

Most sectors are exhibiting strong correlation to the market, relative to their historical correlation. In current market leadership, XLK and XLE are firmly in pole position, followed by VEU and XLI.

Nasdaq 100 remains in a bullish structure despite short-term volatility driven by US-Iran geopolitical tensions and profit-taking, with price action stabilising above key support at 28,280. Market sentiment was briefly pressured by conflict-related headlines, but losses were largely recovered as ceasefire stability expectations improved and risk appetite returned.

“It seems every other day I am reading a story about a massive insider trading scandal.”
US equity futures pointed to a firmer open on Friday, as investors weighed a deliberately restrained American military response to Iran's downing of a US drone against the prospect of a significant slowdown in April hiring. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures edged higher, while Dow futures gained 156 points in early trading.

Trade court overrules 10% global tariffs, three AI companies are listing next week, GameStop's short interest could be about to spike, and more news to start your day.

If hostilities dissipate in the Persian Gulf then investors should be able to refocus their attention on the real drivers of the market: earnings and the AI boom

It hasn't been all good news on the earnings front. Whirlpool warned of a "recession-level industry decline" for big-ticket consumer purchases like household appliances.

Lime, which operates an electric bike and scooter network and is backed by Uber Technologies , filed to go public in the United States on Friday.

Many American car buyers are gravitating to hybrid vehicles to offset the recent surge in gas prices from the Iran war, according to fresh industry sales data and dealers.

In this episode of Bloomberg Tech: Europe, Bloomberg's Tom Mackenzie explores the accelerating race for autonomous driving. From Waymo's sensor-driven precision to Wayve's mapless, end-to-end AI approach, the battle for the future of mobility is intensifying.

Returns on investment are still attractive enough to suck capital into the AI infrastructure buildout, but many of the benefits are accruing to companies in Asia rather than the U.S.

Oil prices edge higher, with Brent above $101

There had been ample warnings that stocks with price momentum had shot up too quickly, and on Thursday gravity reasserted itself.

Record foreign outflows and surging energy costs are battering India's economy and the rupee. While geopolitical tensions drive crude prices higher, some sectors show resilience amid the volatility.