Key takeaways
- U.S. job growth surprises to the upside
- Japan election outcome boosts growth expectations
- Investors grow more selective in tech
U.S. hiring beats forecasts in January
The January U.S. jobs report, published on Wednesday, surprised to the upside. Payrolls rose by 130,000, a clear step up from December’s revised total of 48,000 and well above consensus expectations. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate fell to 4.3%, a historically low level and a sign the labor market remains resilient.
However, the composition of job growth tells a more nuanced story. Gains were concentrated in healthcare and social assistance, with the construction sector also contributing. Meanwhile, higher-paying sectors such as financial services and parts of the information sector saw modest job losses. Those areas are typically associated with stronger wage growth and white-collar demand.
From a U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) perspective, continued job growth and a stable unemployment rate support rates staying on hold for now. If employment is still expanding, it’s harder to argue that policy is meaningfully restricting activity. Markets did react, though, with gold extending its recent pullback as the stronger data tempered expectations for near-term rate cuts.
In short, U.S. job growth last month was better than feared. Still, where those gains occurred leaves some uncertainty around the broader outlook.
Markets embrace Japan’s growth push
In Japan, Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and the ruling bloc secured a supermajority in the country’s Feb. 8 elections. This gave Takeichi’s party a mandate to pursue stimulus, tax relief for consumers, investment in strategic industries, and higher defense spending.
In the wake of the election, questions quickly turned to funding. Japan’s public debt already exceeds 200% of GDP (gross domestic product), leading investors to wonder if additional spending could lead to more borrowing, higher bond yields and a weaker yen.
The market reaction, however, was more constructive than cautious, with Japanese equities surging to new records. Meanwhile, government bond yields edged slightly higher, while the yen firmed modestly. This combination suggests investors are embracing the potential growth impulse while monitoring fiscal dynamics.
Tech leadership faces closer scrutiny
After leading markets last year, technology shares have lagged as investors rotate away from the most expensive AI-related names. Concerns around valuations, spending plans, and growth assumptions have intensified, particularly following recent capital expenditure announcements.
The largest technology firms are on track to spend more than $650 billion this year, representing a 60% increase from 2025. That scale of investment has sharpened investor focus on returns and execution. Investors are increasingly asking who benefits and who faces disruption. Three key themes stand out:
- Large, established software platforms retain structural advantages.
Many are deeply embedded within enterprise systems. AI may expand functionality and spending over time rather than replace these platforms outright.
- Selectivity is increasing.
Investors are gravitating toward businesses that are harder to replicate, including infrastructure and mission-critical back-office tools.
- Risks are becoming clearer.
If AI lowers barriers to entry or weakens pricing power, profit margins could face pressure. Companies that rely on seat-based pricing models may find it harder to sustain historical revenue growth.
For now, investors are watching practical signposts and asking questions like: Are companies deploying AI at scale? Is AI generating incremental spending? Can revenue grow without simply adding users?
The answers are still emerging. In the meantime, the market is acting like a judge at the Winter Olympics, where strong routines may draw attention, but medals are reserved for those who can actually execute.