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The New York Stock Exchange. At 1336 GMT, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 36.01 points, or 0.16 per cent, at 22,062.11. Image Credit: AP

London: The dollar, bond yields and US stock futures all rose on Friday, following stronger-than-expected US jobs data which also pointed to wage growth picking up in the world’s biggest economy.

It bolstered what was set to be a fourth straight week of gains for world stocks and metals, and helped lift some of the weight that has been on the dollar as a saga over Russian interference in last year’s US election has deepened.

The US Labour Department said non-farm payrolls increased by 209,000 jobs last month amid broad gains across industries.

June’s employment gain was also revised up to 231,000 from an already strong 222,000, while hourly earnings rose 0.3 per cent in July after rising 0.2 per cent in June. That was the biggest increase in five months.

It sent the dollar index — the dollar measured vs 6 other top world currencies — to a four-day high, pushing the euro back to $1.1829 and the Japanese yen to 110.59 per dollar.

“At first blush it is pretty strong,” said David Joy, Chief Market Strategist at Ameriprise Financial in Boston.

Expectations

“The number of jobs created easily exceeded the expectation.

Good strength in manufacturing jobs, average hourly earnings met expectations, an uptick from last month, participation rate up a tick.” Wall Street stock futures climbed to point to a slightly higher start for Wall Street’s main markets than they had been before the data.

The highlight so far this week has been the Dow Jones Industrial breaking through the 22,000 barrier which has also helped MSCI’s ‘All World’ index rise for a fourth week in a row.

In bond markets, traders were betting that the upbeat payrolls figures would help cement a scaling back of the Federal Reserve’s $4.5 trillion (Dh16.5 trillion) balance sheet next month, and could raise US interest rates again later in the year.

The US 10-year Treasury yield was up 3 basis points at 2.26 per cent, dragging bond yields in Europe higher. The US five-year, 30-year treasury yield curve also flattened to below 100 bps, the lowest since July 11.