The stock market extended this week’s gains amid a rally in big tech and as a solid jobs report bolstered the outlook for corporate profits.

Equities headed toward another record, with the S&P 500 near 4,950. The Nasdaq 100 climbed 1% thanks to bullish outlooks from two megacaps: Meta Platforms Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. Optimism about the economy outweighed bets the Federal Reserve will refrain from cutting rates in the first quarter. Treasury yields climbed across the US curve, with two-year rates jumping 18 points to 4.38%.

“Today’s jobs report calls into question the narrative of a ‘soft landing’,” David Donabedian at CIBC Private Wealth US. “The January jobs report was pretty dramatic, implying there may be ‘no landing.’ The economy is ripping ahead.”

To Neil Dutta at Renaissance Macro Research, strong growth in labor productivity means unit labor costs are under control — which is a good backdrop for corporate earnings. “It’s hard to get too bearish” with such economic resilience, said Bret Kenwell at eToro. Larry Tentarelli at Blue Chip Daily Trend Report sees the data as “a very bullish sign for the economy” — adding that “we are buyers on any short-term weakness in stocks.”

“Just as many were caught off guard by the recession that never appeared in 2023, there’s always the possibility that another year will go by without a recession,” said Chris Zaccarelli at Independent Advisor Alliance. “If that’s the case, it’s hard to see a new bear market starting without one.”

Nonfarm payrolls surged 353,000 last month following upward revisions to the prior two months. The unemployment rate held at 3.7%. Hourly wages accelerated from a month earlier, increasing by the most since March 2022.

Michael Shaoul at Marketfield Asset Management says this report is likely to be enough to start to nude the consensus back to the idea that the US is doing more than avoiding a recession — and that a “decent cyclical expansion is underway”.

Separate data showed US consumer sentiment surged in January from a month earlier by the most since 2005 as retreating inflation helped bolster views about the economy and household finances.

While signs of a strong economy may continue to bode well for corporate results, they may also be a factor delaying the Fed’s pivot.

“Well, I think we can officially kiss a March rate cut goodbye, and more than likely a May,” said Alex McGrath at NorthEnd Private Wealth.

Indeed, Treasury yields soared after Friday’s data strengthened the case for the Fed to defer cutting rates until at least the second quarter.

Swap contracts referencing the March Fed meeting date cut the odds of a quarter-point rate cut in half, to about 15%, while the May contract no longer fully priced in a cut, which it had for more than a month.

“Today’s report reinforces the narrative this week that the Fed does not need to rush into rate cuts,” said Jason Pride at Glenmede. “A March rate cut now appears increasingly unlikely. The more likely trajectory is two-three cuts this year beginning around summer.”

Seema Shah at Principal Asset Management remarks that it wasn’t just a strong January. It turns out that previous months were stronger than initially believed.

“The dramatic upside surprise to both jobs and wage growth means that a March rate cut must be off the table now, and a May cut is also now potentially on ice,” she noted.

Following Wednesday’s Fed decision, Powell said that a cut is unlikely to come at the next gathering in March, which some market participants had been betting on. The Fed chief will appear on CBS News’s 60 Minutes this Sunday to inflation risks, expected rate cuts and the banking system, among other topics, the network said.

To Richard Flynn at Charles Schwab, Friday’s figures may be another factor delaying the Fed’s first rate cut closer to summer, but if the economy maintains its comfortable trajectory, that might not be a bad thing.

“What’s the hurry?” he asks.

The strong market gains remain at nearly unprecedented levels — with shifting expectations on the Fed outlook “unable to crack the momentum,” Mark Hackett at Nationwide.

“Investors remaining on the sidelines are beginning to capitulate, which when paired with the return of share repurchases following earnings season, should act as a tailwind for markets.”

Equities powered ahead Friday, led by a rally in the S&P 500’s most-influential group: technology. Meta, which dazzled shareholders with yet another impressive quarterly earnings report soared and was poised to add roughly $200 billion to its market capitalization. This would be the biggest single-session market value addition, eclipsing the $190 billion gains made by Apple Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. in 2022.

For all the hype over artificial intelligence and its potential to bolster profits, Meta and Amazon stood out as winners of the big-tech earnings season for the simple reason that they have cut tens of thousands of jobs, and their core businesses did well over the holidays. That allowed Meta to announce plans for an additional $50 billion in stock buybacks and its first quarterly dividend, giving investors a reason to stick around.

The rush into technology stocks is resembling the dot-com era, reflecting an assumption that the economy will perform strongly despite tighter monetary policy, according to Bank of America Corp.’s Michael Hartnett.

He notes that 75% of investors expect a soft landing and 20% a no-landing scenario. Yet, while a soft landing should support a broader range of equities, the Magnificent Seven accounted for 45% of the S&P 500’s return in January, reflecting a “leaning toward no landing/bubble,” he said.

In other corporate news, Apple Inc. underperformed after reporting a deepening slump in China during the holiday quarter, even as total iPhone sales were stronger than expected and the company returned to revenue growth. Exxon Mobil Corp. and Chevron Corp. surpassed earnings forecasts as bigger-than-expected oil output from shale fields helped cushion the blow from weakening crude prices. 

This article was provided by Bloomberg News.