US equity futures are flat ahead of today's delayed January payrolls (full preview here) with the market now expecting a weaker print after the Retail Sales miss and weaker high-frequency data. As of 8:00am ET, S&P and Nasdaq 100 futures are both up 0.1%. Pre-market, Mag7 names are mostly lower; Discretionary, Energy, Industrials and Materials are all higher pointing to a potential broad-based cyclical rally while TMT is muted; AI ex-Mag7 is seeing a bid. JPMorgan’s trading desk expects the delayed January data to give a small boost to stocks — something much-needed amid the indiscriminate selling of those on the wrong side of AI. International markets are mixed with trends similar – Japan closed, KOSPI strong up 100bps, HSI not far behind up 30bps. Europe more flat to down with CAC down 13bps and DAX off 24bps. Australia leads the downside off 172bps. 10 TSY yields are at lows 4.13%, while the USD is weaker for the 4th consecutive session, the DXY down below $97 to $96.58 and Bitcoin trades down to $67k. FT reports Ukraine planning presidential elections and a referendum on any peace deal, potentially by mid-May, under US pressure. Timing uncertain given Donbas, Zaporizhzhia and escalation risks. China CPI soft +0.2% vs. 0.4%. Commodities moving higher this morning led by silver but Comex copper back above $6 to $6.07 up 3%, crude quietly moving up with WTI at $65. Today’s macro data focus is on the NFP release but watch the drop in Mortgage Approvals given the strength of the recent Homebuilders bid. McDonald’s and Cisco are due to report.

In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks are mixed (Nvidia +0.6%, Amazon +0.2%, Microsoft +0.2%, Alphabet +0.07%, Apple -0.04%, Meta -0.4%, Tesla -0.2%)

January’s payrolls report (full preview here)is due after several Trump admin officials, including National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett and Peter Navarro, recently warned that investors should expect lower jobs numbers going forward. Analysts are also anticipating an annual revision to the jobs count, which is expected to reveal a huge markdown in the year through March 2025, to the tune of 750-900K jobs. Bloomberg’s consensus is for 65k job additions in January vs 50k in December,with a crowd-sourced whisper number of 35k,while scenarios laid out by JPMorgan Market Intelligence suggest a sweet spot between 60k and 110k to boost stocks. With the job market in the midst of a “low-hire, low-fire” environment, expectations are low, which could act as a potential catalyst for equities.

JPMorgan strategists also note that the S&P 500 options market is underpricing payrolls compared to historical swings, with past moves nearly double what is currently being priced. Meanwhile, interest-rate traders are betting on two or three Fed rate cuts this year, becoming slightly more conservative than the dovish bets seen after Warsh’s nomination earlier in the month.

“We’re still in this sort of, not-really-hiring, not-really-firing mode. But we haven’t seen a clear breakout in either direction,” said Graham Secker, head of equity strategy at Pictet Wealth Management. “Everyone’s very aware of the kind of the K-shape dynamic within the US economy, and the US consumer in particular.”

For Nicolas Bickel, group head of investment private banking at Edmond de Rothschild, the jobs report and Friday’s inflation data will offer insight into the impact of January’s extreme weather. A strong jobs report would instill confidence in the consumer outlook and help fuel a broadening of the stock rally.

“I really like that rotation personally, because it’s for me the lifeblood of a bull market,” Bickel said. Investors “are just choosing another horse, and means that they have money to be invested, or are confident in the economy.”

The selloff in software stocks has been overblown, creating buying opportunities for investors, according to Nannette Hechler-Fayd’Herbe, head of investment strategy for EMEA at Lombard Odier.

“There have been a lot of concerns that AI might be disrupting software companies, but we have held the view that actually, it is empowering them, it is shortening the time for coding, it is enabling efficiencies of workflows,” she told Bloomberg TV. “For us it’s actually been an opportunity to take exposure.”

In other assets, Bitcoin fell to its lowest level since last Friday’s selloff, despite support from its largest holders, so-called whale wallets, in their biggest buying spree since November. The dollar also fell for a fourth straight day. In Europe, shares in software firms and wealth managers continued to slide on AI disruption fears.

Source: ZeroHedge News