NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 01: The New York Stock Exchange is seen during morning trading on April 01, 2025 in New York City. Stocks opened up low as the market reacts to tomorrow’s expected proposal by U.S. President Donald Trump for a round of new tariffs on most imports to the United States, which the president has dubbed “Liberation Day.” China, Japan, and South Korea have agreed to respond to U.S. tariffs jointly.   Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by Michael M. Santiago / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

Europe’s main equity indices closed higher but Wall Street slumped following a strong open. Asia’s leading stock markets were mixed.
Photo: AFP / Getty Images / Michael M Santiago

Stock markets were mixed Friday (NZT) as a rally lost momentum after US jobs data clouded hopes of further interest rate cuts and fears of an AI bubble persisted.

Europe’s main equity indices closed higher but Wall Street slumped following a strong open. Asia’s leading stock markets were mixed.

Investors cheered an earnings report released late Wednesday by AI bellwether Nvidia, which topped expectations on fierce demand for its advanced chips.

Chief executive Jensen Huang brushed off fears of an artificial intelligence bubble that has caused global equities to wobble.

Jim Reid, managing director at Deutsche Bank, said Nvidia’s results had temporarily stalled some fears.

But Adam Sarhan of 50 Park Investments warned: “When you have valuations that are this high, they’re not sustainable.”

Shares in the chip giant – which last month hit a US$5 trillion (NZ$9t) valuation – slipped after rallying at the start of Wall Street trading Thursday. They closed 3.2 percent down.

The upbeat earnings were offset by data showing the US jobless rate crept higher in September, even as hiring exceeded analyst expectations.

“This report is unlikely to massively shift the needle for the December Fed meeting which looks like a pause,” said Joshua Mahony, chief market analyst at traders Scope Markets. He was referring to the Federal Reserve’s next interest rate decision due in December.

The dollar traded mixed against its main rivals following the update.

Thursday’s jobs publication marked the first official snapshot of the labor market’s health in more than two months, owing to a 43-day US government shutdown that ended last week.

The report is set to deepen divisions within the Fed, with underlying job market weakness adding to the case for another rate cut – but solid hiring potentially encouraging some officials to hold off for longer.

Oil prices ticked down, and a US Treasury official told reporters that Chinese and Indian refineries and banks were moving to comply with recently announced US sanctions on Russia’s two biggest oil producers – Lukoil and Rosneft.

China and India are key buyers of Russian oil, and the sanctions were aimed at cutting off revenues fueling war in Ukraine.

The US official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said many such institutions are conscious of these sanctions and risk averse, while recognising the importance of relationships with the West.

– AFP