By Lawrence Delevingne and Naomi Rovnick
(Reuters) -Wall Street stocks recovered some ground on Wednesday after technology conglomerate Alphabet rose on a favorable antitrust ruling, but gains were muted as investors digested softer-than-expected labor market data and a selloff in long-term global government bonds.
Job openings, a measure of labor demand, dropped 176,000 to 7.181 million by the last day of July, the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics said in its “JOLTS” report on Wednesday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast 7.378 million unfilled jobs.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped 0.05%, the S&P 500 rose 0.5%, and the Nasdaq Composite added about 1%. Alphabet jumped around 9%, while Apple also gained nearly 4% as the ruling allowed Google to continue lucrative payments to the iPhone maker.
However, a selloff in global long-dated bonds sent Japan’s borrowing costs to record highs on Wednesday, as mounting concerns over government debt sustainability and long-term inflation also rattled investors in Europe.
One concern is that the upward pressure on long-term government bond yields “creates headwinds for equity valuations,” Bill Sterling, global strategist at GW&K Investment Management, said in an email. But he added that markets continue to anticipate a Federal Reserve interest rate cut this month, which “should help deliver a soft landing for the economy and broad-based re-acceleration of economic growth next year.”
Spot gold hit an all-time high of $3,577 as the rush out of long-term government debt, traditionally considered low-risk, sparked a hunt for alternative safe-haven assets.
The 30-year Japanese government bond yield hit an unprecedented 3.28% on Wednesday, a day after selloffs in similarly dated British gilts, U.S. Treasuries and Canadian bonds.
“The economic reforms needed to really cover increasing debt are lacking, and the capital market sees that,” Deutsche Bank CEO Christian Sewing said about the long-dated debt selloff at a conference on Wednesday morning.
The trend may continue, he added, “if we see a further increase in political instability, if we don’t see any reforms.”
British finance minister Rachel Reeves is expected to raise taxes in her autumn budget to remain in line with her fiscal targets, while in France, Prime Minister Francois Bayrou looks set to lose a confidence vote as opposition parties balk at his spending cuts.
In Japan, government departments have just presented record budget requests and senior aides to Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, including Secretary-General Hiroshi Moriyama, have offered to resign following their party’s defeat in July’s upper house election.


