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CNBC's Deirdre Bosa reports on the slump in software stocks.

January jobs report reveals "we're in a low-hire, low-fire environment," JPMorgan Asset Management Fixed Income Portfolio Manager Kelsey Berro says.

Claudia Sahm, Chief Economist at New Century Advisors, reacts to the January jobs report. US payrolls rose in January by the most in more than a year and the unemployment rate unexpectedly fell, suggesting the labor market continued to stabilize at the start of 2026.

Trump also would like to see lower interest rates.

Tech sector valuations and AI capex spending now rival dot-com bubble extremes, raising significant risk of a major reset or profit surge requirement. AI capex as a percentage of GDP has surpassed dot-com-era highs, with hyperscalers and chipmakers risking overcapacity and future margin pressure.

Vanguard's Global Head of Fixed Income on bonds' role in a portfolio, income opportunities, credit risks, and the outlook for fixed-income markets.

Unemployment rate was 4.3% in January with gains 13,000 less than the 143,000 jobs added a year ago, report shows

Energy, basic materials, and defensive consumer stocks are in. Tech and financials are out.

Weakness under the surface of a strong headline nonfarm payrolls print can lead to a market fade, says Kevin Green. He talks about the technical factors he sees hitting stocks and bonds alike.

Revised data Wednesday showed the U.S. economy generated far fewer jobs in 2024 and 2025 than was initially estimated.

'Mornings with Maria' panel reacts to the U.S. economy adding a stronger-than-expected 130k jobs in January. #foxbusiness #morningswithmaria

Companies in the S&P 500 achieving double-digit sales growth while improving profit margins include Palantir, Micron, Boeing and Alphabet.

Coal stocks advanced Wednesday following news that President Donald Trump plans to sign an executive order that could help the industry.

CNBC's Rick Santelli joins 'Squawk Box' to break down the January jobs report.

The US economy added 130,000 jobs in January, well above economists' expectations, while the unemployment rate fell to 4.3%, signaling a labor market that is stabilizing after a sluggish 2025. The Bureau of Labor Statistics said nonfarm payrolls rose 130,000 last month, doubling the Bloomberg consensus forecast of 65,000.

Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid reaffirmed his resistance to further interest-rate cuts, arguing that further Fed easing would risk allowing inflation to remain too high.

The good news in the Bureau of Labor Statistics Job Report for January is that payroll growth was higher than expected. The bad news is that, for most of 2025, the numbers were much worse than we thought.

The US economy added 130,000 jobs in January, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, well above economists' forecasts of 65,000, based on a Bloomberg survey. Additionally, the report — which was delayed due to the partial government shutdown — saw the unemployment rate tick lower to 4.3% while average hourly wages rose 3.7% year-over-year.

The Labor Department reported that employers added 130,000 jobs in January, well above the 55,000 jobs expected. The data release follows a temporary delay from the short-lived government shutdown.

Pierre Yared, acting chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisors, reacts to what he sees as a "blowout" employment report for January. Yared says job growth far exceeded expectations despite demographic shifts and reduced immigration and adds that the Federal Reserve should focus on productivity while balancing its dual mandate.