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Asian markets find footing as US jobs data, PMIs lift stocks

By Thomson Reuters Jul 2, 2026 | 8:09 PM

By Gregor Stuart Hunter

SINGAPORE, July 3 (Reuters) – Stocks rose during the Asian trading session on Friday after a lukewarm U.S. jobs report poured cold water on the prospect of an imminent rate hike from the Federal Reserve and regional activity gauges pointed to an economic expansion ​during June.

After a shaky start, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 2.2% ‌following two consecutive days of declines.

South Korea’s Kospi swung between gains and losses, before surging more than 6% as buyers pounced on battered chipmaker stocks. S&P 500 e-mini futures rose 0.4%, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 reversed early losses to trade 1.2% higher.

Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) data released on Friday indicated increased activity across the region.

Japan’s services sector returned to expansion in June after stalling ‌the ​previous month, while China’s services activity expanded at a slightly slower pace ⁠but overseas demand rose at the ⁠fastest rate in 20 months.

“The PMIs remain healthy by recent standards and still imply stronger economic momentum across Q2 as a whole,” analysts from Capital Economics said of the Chinese data.

U.S. LABOUR MARKET COOLING

U.S. job growth slowed sharply in June and payroll gains for the prior two months were revised ​lower, according to data released on Thursday, pointing to a cooling labour market. The unemployment rate dropped to 4.2% last month from 4.3% in May as workers left the labour force, pushing the participation rate to ⁠the lowest level in more than five years.

“The figures challenged ⁠the narrative that the Fed remains on track to hike in the second ​half of this year,” Westpac analysts wrote in a research report.

The tepid jobs data doused traders’ expectations of an ​imminent rate hike and raised the odds that the Fed will keep rates on ‌hold until October.

Fed funds futures are pricing an implied 46.8% probability that the U.S. central bank will keep rates steady at its meeting on September 15 to 16, compared to a 35.8% chance a day earlier, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

Overnight, stocks on Wall Street were a mixed bag as the S&P 500 ⁠was flat and the Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.8%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose to a record close.

The U.S. market will be closed on Friday in observance of the Independence Day holiday.

Against the yen, the U.S. ⁠dollar was flat at 161.06, with ‌the greenback giving up gains as market liquidity was thinned by the holiday ⁠and traders remained on watch for intervention.

The Japanese currency has been choppy this ​week after ‌Reuters reported on Thursday authorities may have adopted a new approach to ​their forays into ⁠the market.

The U.S. dollar index, which measures the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, was down 0.3% at 100.71.

In early European trading, pan-region futures were up 0.3%, German DAX futures were 0.4% higher and FTSE futures nudged up 0.1%.

In commodities, Brent crude futures rose 0.6% to $72.26 a barrel in Asia. Gold was up 1.2% at $4,174.16.

In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin was flat at $61,549.17, while ether edged up 0.1% to $1,706.26.

(Reporting by Gregor Stuart Hunter; Editing by ​Jamie Freed and Thomas Derpinghaus)