CNBC Business News Update - Market Open: Stocks Higher, January Jobs Report Stronger Than Expected, 2025 Job Creation Revised Downward To Near Net Zero Job Growth 2/11/26
Episode Date: February 11, 2026From Wall Street to Main Street, the latest on the markets and what it means for your money. Updated regularly on weekdays, featuring CNBC expert analysis and sound from top business newsmakers. Ancho...red and reported by CNBC's Jessica Ettinger. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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I'm Jessica Eddinger.
CNBC, Wall Street is higher on a stronger-than-expected jobs report for January.
The Dow is up 234 points. Caterpillar shares leading it higher, they're up almost 4% this morning.
The S&P 500 index up 36 points.
The NASDAX up 121 points.
Shares of Nvidia are up almost 2% this morning.
The U.S. added a surprisingly strong 130,000 jobs in January.
It was a delayed employment report from the Labor Department because of the brief government shutdown from last week.
The unemployment rate ticked down to 4.3 percent where the U.S. was last summer back in August.
Non-farm payrolls for January coming in twice expectations had 130,000.
That would be the juiciest going back to April of last year.
CNBC's Rick Santelli.
But the number of jobs created in 2025?
actually was much lower than first thought.
The revisions have come.
Revision's came in at 860-something thousand jobs.
That's still a huge downward revision to last year,
near net zero job growth over the course of 2025.
I'm glad to see payroll employment came in stronger than anticipated.
This print still demonstrates continued weakness in the labor market.
It's nice to see that manufacturing employment is ticking up for the first time,
in nine months. We're still seeing inflation stubbornly elevated, and we're seeing this continued
kind of anemic, low-hire job market. That's former Biden administration treasury official
Katie Richards on CNBC. Here's a take on jobs from CNBC's Mike Santoli. Where the net job growth
is coming from is health care and education service. Almost entirely. Tech jobs, not really growing.
They're actually down as a percentage of overall employment. What you're,
you're not seeing outright job reductions that seem directly tied to AI replacement.
You have a lot of hesitancy to hire.
You have a lot of people, hey, let's let attrition do this for us.
Quarter of a million people retire every month, right?
That's what the demographics are telling you.
There's a lot of people just exiting seats at companies.
The Bitcoin bounce has faded.
It's back down to just below $67,000.
Gold and silver bounce this morning and they've pulled back as well.
Heineken says it'll cut 6,000 jobs amid falling beer sales.
It joins other big names with recent job cut announcements like UPS, Amazon, Dow Chemical, and the Washington Post.
Kraft Hines, pausing the split of the company as the new CEO is calling the current company's issues fixable.
Ford out with its worst quarterly earnings miss in four years, but it's forecasting a better year this year.
Toymaker Mattel reported disappointing quarterly results.
It's guidance, disappointed investors, too.
Investors are waiting for McDonald's to report this afternoon after the closing bell.
It's been pushing value meals to franchises, and that's been causing a little tension with some.
The Super Bowl champion, Seattle Seahawks, enjoying a hometown victory parade today.
Jessica Ettinger, CNBC.
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Thank you.
