A newsletter designed to prepare you for the day, offering a concise summary of overnight developments and key events ahead that could influence your workday.
By Richard Fargose
May 5, 2025 at 1:50 AM IST
QUICK SNAPSHOT
Global Sentiment: Risk-on
Factors: Corporate Earnings, Trade Talks
TODAY’S WATCHLIST
US April S&P Global Composite PMI
US April ISM Non-Manufacturing Employment data
Mahindra & Mahindra Earnings
THE BIG STORY
As momentum builds around a proposed bilateral trade agreement between India and the US, Washington is expected to press for wide-ranging changes that could favour American exporters and multinationals, according to the Global Trade Research Initiative. The think tank’s founder, Ajay Srivastava, said the US demands include reducing agricultural tariffs, cutting back India’s minimum support price programmes for staples like rice and wheat, and lifting restrictions on genetically modified imports. In the dairy sector, India’s strict GM-free feed certification and animal-based feed bans are seen by the US as de facto trade barriers.
On the retail front, Srivastava noted that the US is likely to push for fewer restrictions on companies like Amazon and Walmart, which are currently constrained by India’s rules on foreign-owned inventory-based e-commerce. However, India maintains that these safeguards are crucial to protect small domestic retailers and preserve regulatory autonomy in a rapidly evolving sector. The US has also criticised India's licensing process for remanufactured and second-hand capital goods as slow and costly, adding further friction to what is shaping up to be a high-stakes negotiation.
DATA
US nonfarm payrolls grew by 177,000 in April down from a revised 185,000 in March, surpassing economists' 130,000 forecast, while unemployment held steady at 4.2%. Though the report eased immediate recession fears after Q1's GDP contraction, analysts note the labour market's resilience may not yet reflect the growing economic uncertainty from Trump's erratic trade policies. The data shows employers maintaining staff despite tariff headwinds, but the delayed impact of protectionist measures leaves the jobs outlook increasingly fragile.
WHAT HAPPENED OVERNIGHT
US stocks extended gains for a second consecutive week on Friday, lifted by encouraging economic data and potential US-China trade de-escalation, though Apple slid 4% after reducing its buyback programme and warning of $900 million in tariff costs. The Magnificent Seven saw mixed performances, with Meta climbing 4.3% and Nvidia rising 2.6%, while Amazon edged down 0.1%. Energy stocks Chevron (+1.6%) and ExxonMobil (+0.4%) advanced on solid earnings, but Block plummeted 20% on a grim 2025 outlook and Take-Two Interactive dropped 7% after delaying its flagship game release.
US Treasury surged on Friday, with the 10-year yield jumping 7.7 basis points to 4.308% and the policy-sensitive 2-year yield spiking 12.5 basis points to 3.826%, as robust jobs data and potential US-China tariff talks reduced expectations for June Fed rate cuts. The 30-year bond yield rose 5.2 basis points to 4.789%, reflecting a broad market pivot toward risk assets.
The US dollar edged lower despite the strong US jobs report, with the dollar index dipping 0.14% to 100.00 as the euro gained 0.12% to $1.1304. The greenback also weakened 0.3% against the yen to 144.99, suggesting markets may be looking beyond domestic labour data to global factors like potential Fed policy shifts.
Brent crude oil prices slid more than 1% on Friday, capping their worst weekly performance since late March, as market participants grew wary ahead of the upcoming OPEC+ meeting set to determine June output policy. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude dropped 95 cents, or 1.6%, to close at $58.29 a barrel, while Brent crude fell 84 cents, or 1.4%, to settle at $61.29.
Day’s Ledger
Economic Data
Corporate Actions
Policy Events
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