Rising bond yields could contain stocks
Rising bond yields could contain stocks · CNBC

The increasingly uncomfortable rise in interest rates could have a strong hold on stocks Thursday, as traders await Friday's jobs report.

Unemployment claims are the key data for markets Thursday, after they hit a 15-year low in the week earlier. Economists expect to see 275,000 first-time claims, up from 262,000 in the previous period, which is still a number that points to a healthy labor market.

Traders say some views for a big rebound in Friday's April nonfarm payrolls soured after Wednesday's ADP report showed just 169,000 private sector payrolls. But there was not a downshifting in Wall Street forecasts for Friday's nonfarm payrolls. Economists expect 224,000 jobs, up from 126,000 in March according to Thomson Reuters.


Stocks slumped Wednesday and selling accelerated in the afternoon as the 10-year yield edged to 2.25 percent, a more than two-month high, and well above Friday's 2.11 percent level.

The April jobs report comes as economists have just written off first-quarter growth and estimate that GDP contracted by a consensus forecast of 0.4 percent. Fridays' jobs report is the first major data point for the second quarter, and traders will be watching both for what it says about growth and as a metric that could influence the Fed's timing on a rate hike. As of now, market expectations are for the first rise in September or later.

The S&P 500 (INDEX: .SPX) closed above its lows Wednesday, but was off 0.4 percent to 2,080, and the Nasdaq also slipped 0.4 percent to 4,919.

"There's a lot of uncertainty around rates. Now the disappointing growth in Q1, that's creating more uncertainty and obviously that will create some choppiness. All the broad macro trades have not worked out in the last few days. People are short oil, that's not working. People are long dollar, that's not working," said Venu Krishna, head of equity linked and small-cap strategy at Barclays.

He said small caps too wiped out their year gains last week and are lower this week, but he still expects them outperform later this year.

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"The big variable will be if the U.S. economy falters. Then small caps will continue to falter. The very act that has allowed them to benefit-greater balance sheet leverage and greater capital spending-will also hurt t hem if things get slow," Krishna said.

Treasury yields, particularly at the long end, have been following a move higher in European sovereign yields, led by the German bund. A heavy calendar of U.S. corporate issuance has also drawn funds from Treasurys, as investors move into corporate credits, like Wednesday's $8 billion Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) deal.