US Jobs Report

February 11 – Daily Market Update

11 February 2026 – Daily Market Updates Markets Daily — Broad Market Update Market snapshot (as of 6:06 a.m. ET) US equity futures: flat to slightly lower (S&P 500 futures near 6961, -0.01%) Europe: Stoxx 600 around 619.6, -0.22% Asia: Hang Seng closed up roughly 0.3% near 27266 US dollar: softer by about 0.3% on a broad trade-weighted basis Bitcoin: near $66600, down roughly 2.9% US Treasuries: yields edging lower across the curve Macro and policy “Bad news is good news” is back in focus. Softer data have reinforced expectations that major central banks, led by the Fed, could begin easing later this year. Markets are leaning toward multiple rate cuts in 2026, though timing remains data-dependent. Today’s US labor-market update will be pivotal. Traders will watch headline payrolls, the unemployment rate, participation, average hourly earnings, and—critically—revisions to prior months. A cooler set of numbers would bolster the case for earlier policy support; an upside surprise could push back those timelines. Global growth signals are mixed: Europe continues to show uneven momentum, while Asia’s tech‑heavy markets have benefited from the weaker dollar and ongoing demand for semiconductors and AI infrastructure. Equities US: Index futures are steady as investors balance resilient mega-cap tech leadership with late‑cycle dynamics favoring quality balance sheets and cash flow. Rate‑sensitive segments tend to benefit when yields fall, while small caps remain more volatile around macro surprises. Europe: Modest declines in early trade as investors digest earnings, cost‑reduction plans, and guidance resets. Defensive pockets (utilities, staples, healthcare) are finding support when bond yields ease, while cyclicals trade more on growth and China‑linked headlines. Asia: Mixed session. Tech‑oriented markets continue to attract flows on AI hardware demand, while parts of Greater China remain range‑bound amid policy and property‑sector uncertainty. Rates and credit US Treasuries are firmer, with the belly of the curve leading on softer growth signals. A cool employment print would likely extend the rally and favor a bull‑steepening bias; a hotter release risks a reversal with front‑end yields most sensitive. Investment‑grade credit spreads are broadly stable; high yield trades in a tight range but remains sensitive to earnings surprises and any pickup in default chatter. Currencies The dollar is easing for a fourth session as rate‑cut probabilities firm. A benign wage‑inflation number would likely keep the pressure on the greenback; stronger earnings growth could flip the script. G10: Euro and pound are firmer against the dollar; yen steadies as US yields dip. Select commodity currencies are consolidating after recent gains. Commodities and crypto Oil: Range‑bound as supply risks and inventory dynamics offset growth concerns. Positioning remains cautious ahead of key macro prints. Gold: Supported by lower real yields and a softer dollar; ETF flows remain the swing factor. Digital assets: Bitcoin is retracing after a strong multi‑week run; intra‑day volatility remains elevated around liquidity pockets and risk sentiment. Theme to watch: The AI dispersion Markets are recalibrating winners and potential laggards from rapid AI adoption. Hardware beneficiaries and energy‑efficient infrastructure remain in focus, while parts of software, services, and select financial niches face headline‑driven volatility. Expect continued differentiation at the single‑name level as business models adapt and pricing power is tested. Event radar US labor market report: headline jobs, unemployment rate, participation, average hourly earnings, and prior‑month revisions Central bank speakers and minutes across major economies Corporate earnings: watch forward‑guidance language, cost discipline, AI investment pacing, and capital‑return updates Trading lens: What could move markets today Weaker‑than‑expected jobs/wage data: likely bullish duration, softer dollar, supportive for rate‑sensitives and quality growth Stronger‑than‑expected jobs/wage data: potential bear‑flattening in rates, dollar bounce, factor rotation toward cyclical/value and financials Big revisions: could meaningfully reshape the narrative even if the headline meets estimates House view highlights Macro remains a tug‑of‑war between cooling growth and prospective policy support. Near term, data beats/misses will likely drive sharp, factor‑level rotations more than index‑directional trends. Stay selective within equities, with an emphasis on quality balance sheets and durable cash flow. In fixed income, carry remains attractive, but duration should be sized with event risk in mind. Important information This material is for information only and does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security or strategy. Markets are volatile and can move quickly around economic releases and company news. Consider your objectives, risk tolerance, and local regulations before making investment decisions. Market levels and performance figures referenced above are indicative and subject to change. Disclaimer: Trading foreign exchange and/or contracts for difference on margin carries a high level of risk, and may not be suitable for all investors as you could sustain losses in excess of deposits. The products are intended for retail, professional and eligible counterparty clients. Before deciding to trade any products offered by PhillipCapital (DIFC) Private Limited you should carefully consider your objectives, financial situation, needs and level of experience. You should be aware of all the risks associated with trading on margin. The content of the Website must not be construed as personal advice. For retail, professional and eligible counterparty clients. Before deciding to trade any products offered by PhillipCapital (DIFC) Private Limited you should carefully consider your objectives, financial situation, needs and level of experience. You should be aware of all the risks associated with trading on margin. Rolling Spot Contracts and CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 78% of our retail client accounts lose money while trading with us. You should consider whether you understand how Rolling Spot Contracts and CFDs work, and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money. 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February 2 – Daily Market Update

2 February 2026 – Daily Market Updates Markets Daily: Volatility returns as crowded trades reset; central banks and jobs data in focus Market Snapshot (as of 06:52 am ET) S&P 500 Futures: 6933.5 (-0.46%) Nasdaq 100 Futures: 25466.25 (-0.79%) Bitcoin: 77851.5 (+1.86%) Gold: 4774.16 (-2.45%) Opening take Risk appetite softened to start the week as investors trimmed popular long positions across equities and commodities. US equity futures point lower for a fourth session, the dollar is little changed, and rate markets are steady ahead of a dense macro calendar that includes major central bank decisions in Europe and the US January employment report. The notable outlier is crypto, where prices stabilized after a volatile weekend. Today’s key themes Commodities swing: Precious metals and energy retreated sharply, reflecting a combination of profit-taking, position de-risking, and idiosyncratic liquidity stresses in parts of Asia. Intraday moves have been wide, a hallmark of thin conditions into regional holidays and tighter margins for leveraged positions. Dip-buying interest is emerging in physical markets, but price discovery remains unsettled. Tech-led equity pullback: After a strong run, high-beta segments—particularly AI-adjacent semiconductor names in Asia—saw outsized declines, with spillovers to Europe and US futures. The catalyst mix includes lofty positioning, shifting expectations around capex plans, and a broader “take profits first, ask questions later” mindset into the macro-heavy week. Crypto steadies: Digital assets found a footing after recent losses, trading more in line with broader risk tone rather than in isolation. Correlations with high-growth equities remain elevated, and crypto-exposed equities are seeing pressure in premarket trade despite the rebound in headline tokens. FX and rates: The dollar is marginally softer against majors, with yields largely unchanged as investors await guidance from the ECB and BoE and Friday’s US jobs report. Expect limited directional conviction until those catalysts land. Across regions Asia: Equities weakened, led by technology hardware and semiconductors. A combination of profit-taking and local market liquidity dynamics amplified the moves. Commodity-related shares lagged amid the metals pullback. Europe: Stocks opened mixed-to-lower, with miners and energy underperforming. Defensive sectors held up better as investors positioned for Thursday’s central bank decisions. Sovereign bonds were steady. US: Futures are lower, with cyclical and momentum cohorts indicated down more than the broader tape. Volatility is ticking up from subdued levels as options markets price wider ranges into Friday’s payrolls. Corporate and sector highlights Metals and mining: Gold and silver volatility weighed on producers; beta to spot prices remains high after a strong year-to-date run. Position-sensitive names are seeing outsized moves. Energy: Crude softness and headline risk around geopolitics dragged the complex. Integrateds and E&Ps are indicated lower premarket. AI and cloud: A large enterprise software provider flagged sizable funding plans to expand cloud/AI infrastructure capacity, underscoring the ongoing capex race. Markets continue to debate the durability and timing of returns on hyperscale spend. Media and consumer: A prominent media conglomerate’s leadership planning remains in focus alongside earnings. Consumer and staples bellwethers will offer read-throughs on pricing power and volumes this week. Crypto-linked equities: Miners, exchanges, and infrastructure plays are under pressure despite stabilization in major tokens, reflecting sensitivity to recent drawdowns and hash-price dynamics. The week ahead: macro diary Monday: Global manufacturing PMIs; selected central bank speakers. Earnings from large-cap consumer, entertainment, and software names. Tuesday: Australia policy decision; Eurozone bank lending survey; France/South Korea/Turkey CPI; Spain unemployment; US JOLTS and vehicle sales. US earnings heavy in payments, beverages, pharma, and semis. Wednesday: Services PMIs (selected regions); US ADP employment and ISM services; US Treasury financing outlook. Earnings include a major US search/advertising platform and a global bank. Thursday: Policy decisions from the ECB, BoE, and Mexico; Germany factory orders; France industrial production; US initial jobless claims. Private equity, energy, and ecommerce names report. Friday: US nonfarm payrolls, unemployment rate, and consumer sentiment; Canada jobs; Germany industrial production; India policy decision; Japan household spending and leading index. What we’re watching next Crowding unwind: The rotation out of year-to-date winners suggests positioning rather than macro alone is driving price action. Watch for signs of stabilization in flows before chasing reversals. Central bank tone: Any updates on balance sheet plans and inflation assessment from the ECB/BoE could steer duration and FX into the weekend. US payrolls: After resilient labor prints, any shift in wage growth or participation could influence the timing and magnitude of rate-cut expectations. Earnings breadth: Guideposts from mega-cap tech, semis, payments, and energy will shape the narrative on AI monetization, consumer health, and capex cycles. Risk management considerations Elevated intraday swings in commodities and high-beta equities argue for disciplined sizing and wider stop tolerances. Into Friday’s data, consider scenario planning around labor-market surprises and the knock-on to front-end rates, tech multiples, and USD direction. For hedgers, skew in index options has richened modestly; cross-asset hedges (gold, USD, duration) have been inconsistent—diversification across hedges may be prudent. This material is provided for information only and does not constitute investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Markets are volatile and subject to change. Consider your objectives, risk tolerance, and local regulations before making investment decisions. Disclaimer: Trading foreign exchange and/or contracts for difference on margin carries a high level of risk, and may not be suitable for all investors as you could sustain losses in excess of deposits. The products are intended for retail, professional and eligible counterparty clients. Before deciding to trade any products offered by PhillipCapital (DIFC) Private Limited you should carefully consider your objectives, financial situation, needs and level of experience. You should be aware of all the risks associated with trading on margin. The content of the Website must not be construed as personal advice. For retail, professional and eligible counterparty clients. Before deciding to trade any products offered by PhillipCapital (DIFC) Private Limited you should carefully consider your objectives, financial situation, needs and level of experience. You should be aware of all the risks associated with trading on margin. Rolling Spot Contracts and CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high

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