US Jobs Data Beats Forecasts, Lifting Dollar And Stocks: April 10, 2012

 | Apr 10, 2012 08:50AM ET

Equities

The Nikkei surged 1.7% to 9930, after rising as high as 10008, as approval of a debt swap by Greece’s private debt holders helped relieve investor anxiety. Exporters led the gains as the yen fell to a 9-month low, with Sony and Mazda each up more than 4%. The Kospi climbed .9%, and the ASX 200 gained 1%. In China, weaker than expected inflation data lifted stocks, with the Shanghai Composite settling up .8%, and the Hang Seng up .9%.

European markets gained moderately, lifted in the afternoon by upbeat US jobs data. The DAX advanced .7%, the FTSE climbed .5%, and the CAC40 rose .3%.

US stocks edged up, but concerns over a Greek “credit event” limited gains. The Dow tacked on 14 points to 12922, the Nasdaq gained .6% to 2988, and the S&P 500 rose .4% to 1371. Small cap stocks outperformed, as the Russell 2000 jumped 1.3% to 817. Greece forced all bond holders to accept the debt haircut, triggering payments on credit default swaps, but the event was largely expected.

The US economy added 227K jobs, 17K more than expected, while the unemployment rate remained steady at 8.3%.

Currencies

The dollar powered higher against most global currencies. In Europe, the Swiss franc sank 1.2% to 1.0886, the euro slumped 1.1% to 1.3122, and the pound fell 1% to 1.5676. The yen dropped 1.1% to 82.45, while the Australian dollar slipped .7% to 1.0575. Bucking the trend, the Canadian dollar traded flat, settling at .9906.