Jobless claims, Costco sales, EU leaders in China - what's moving markets

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By Geoffrey Smith

Investing.com -- The U.S. releases more labor market data into a market increasingly focused on recession risks. Ukraine opens the door ever so slightly to a negotiated peace settlement with Russia. The ECB is still on course to hike again in May, but India surprisingly keeps its key rate unchanged. Here's what's moving financial markets on Thursday, 6th April.

1. Labor market data drip-feed continues

The steady stream of U.S. labor market data continues with the release of weekly jobless claims and the Challenger Gray job cuts report for March. Initial claims, due at 08:30 ET (12:30 GMT) are set to touch 200,000 for what would be only the second time since early January.

The March job openings survey and ADP’s private hiring report both indicated that the labor market is cooling quickly, albeit from red-hot levels.

That has encouraged market participants to bet more heavily on a lower interest rate trajectory going forward: the 2-year note yield has now fallen for five days straight, shrugging off repeated interventions from senior Federal Reserve officials who still want to raise the fed funds target range further and hold it there for an extended period.

2. Ukraine hints at peace talks as Macron, von der Leyen meet Xi

Ukraine indicated that it’s willing – with conditions - to negotiate with Russia over the future of Crimea, the first softening of its official position in months. The shift creates a glimmer of hope over how to end a conflict that has badly disrupted the global economy and global markets over the last year.

Andriy Sybiha, the deputy head of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s office, told the FT that Ukraine would be prepared to talk if its troops reached the neck of the isthmus connecting Crimea to the rest of the country, an apparent acknowledgment that it doesn’t have the military strength to achieve full reunification.

The comments come on a day that EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and French President Emmanuel Macron are in Beijing for talks with President Xi Jinping. While those talks are likely to concentrate on the worsening economic relations between the two blocs, they are also likely to touch on China’s support for Russia in the war, and its recent proposals for ending the war.

3. Stocks drifting lower in thin markets, with focus on recession risks

U.S. stock markets are in a holding pattern, with absences due to the looming Easter and Passover holidays likely to keep many on the sidelines – at least until Friday’s official labor market report.

By 05:30 ET (9:30 GMT), Dow Jones futures were down 6 points, effectively unchanged, while S&P 500 futures were down less than 0.1% and Nasdaq 100 futures were down 0.2%. The three main cash indices were mixed on Wednesday, with the Nasdaq losing over 1% on fears of a recession, while the Dow held up better.