U.S. stocks caught a serious bid Thursday morning, with the Dow Jones climbing more than 600 points as investors digested a surprisingly robust jobs report that had been stuck in bureaucratic limbo for weeks.
By the opening bell, the Dow was trading up 1.32% to 46,747.93. The tech-heavy NASDAQ outperformed with a 2.19% gain to 23,058.11, while the S&P 500 added 1.68% to reach 6,754.03.
Labor Market Shows Unexpected Resilience
The market enthusiasm stems from September employment data that finally saw the light of day after a six-week delay caused by the government shutdown. The U.S. labor market posted an unexpectedly strong rebound, with non-farm payrolls jumping by 119,000—more than double the 50,000 economists had penciled in.
Here's where it gets interesting: despite the hiring pickup, the unemployment rate edged up from 4.3% to 4.4%, marking the highest level since October 2021. That's the kind of mixed signal that makes Fed watchers pull their hair out. Strong hiring suggests economic resilience, but rising unemployment hints at labor market softness. The combination revives growth optimism while casting fresh uncertainty over whether the Federal Reserve will deliver another rate cut in December.
Sector Performance
Information technology shares led the charge, jumping 2.4% on Thursday as investors piled into growth stocks. Healthcare stocks took a more measured approach, rising just 0.3% in morning trading.
Notable Stock Movers
Several individual names made dramatic moves. Sonder Holdings Inc (SOND) shares shot up 117% to $0.20, while PACS Group Inc (PACS) surged 60% to $27.00 after reporting better-than-expected quarterly sales results. Magnera Corp (MAGN) shares gained 48% to $11.78 following its fourth-quarter financial results.
On the downside, Brera Holdings PLC (SLMT) shares dropped 39% to $3.53. JX Luxventure Group Inc (JXG) fell 31% to $0.31, while Meihua International Medical Tech Co Ltd (MHUA) tumbled 27% to $0.17 after announcing a 1-for-100 reverse stock split.
Commodities and Global Markets
In commodity markets, oil traded up 0.8% to $59.92 while gold edged up 0.1% to $4,083.90. Silver dipped 0.2% to $50.780, and copper rose 0.1% to $5.0255.
European markets joined the rally. The eurozone's STOXX 600 gained 0.9%, Spain's IBEX 35 Index rose 1.1%, and London's FTSE 100 climbed 0.7%. Germany's DAX 40 gained 1.2% and France's CAC 40 jumped 1% during the session.
Asian markets closed mostly higher on Thursday, with Japan's Nikkei 225 gaining 2.65%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng essentially flat with a 0.02% gain, China's Shanghai Composite falling 0.40%, and India's BSE Sensex gaining 0.52%.
Additional Economic Data
Beyond the headline jobs number, other economic indicators showed continued stability. U.S. initial jobless claims declined by 8,000 from the previous week to 220,000 in the week ending November 15. The Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index increased 11 points to -1.7 in November, beating market estimates of -3.1 and suggesting manufacturing conditions may be stabilizing.
The combination of strong employment, moderating jobless claims, and improving manufacturing sentiment paints a picture of an economy that's cooling but not collapsing—exactly the kind of soft landing scenario the Fed has been trying to engineer.