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US Equity Markets End Lower Amid Technology Stock Sell-Off, Stronger-Than-Expected Jobs Data

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US equity indexes were lower on Friday amid a sell-off in mega-cap tech stocks following a stronger-than-expected jobs report.

* Nonfarm payrolls surged by 172,000 in May, above the 88,000 jobs increase expected in a Bloomberg-compiled survey. April was revised upwards to a 179,000 increase, and March payrolls were revised upwards to a 214,000 increase, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Friday.

* The probability of a 25 basis-point increase in interest rates in December surged to 43%, from 36% a week ago, according to the CME FedWatch tool.

* July West Texas Intermediate crude oil fell $2.76 to settle at $90.28 per barrel, while August Brent crude, the global benchmark, was last seen down $2.12 at $92.91.

* Cooper (COO) shares were up about 8.6%, the top gainer on S&P 500, after the company reported stronger-than-expected growth in fiscal Q2 adjusted earnings and sales.

* Insmed (INSM) shares were down roughly 10%, among the steepest decliners on the Nasdaq, after RBC Capital Markets said Friday that brensocatib shows strong physician conviction alongside a broad prescribing intent that can enable a significant growth opportunity as doctors develop experience with the drug.

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New Zealand's Total New Lending Falls in April

New Zealand's total new lending decreased to NZ$14.17 billion in April from NZ$15.13 billion in March, according to data from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand released on Friday.New lending fully secured by residential mortgage fell to NZ$8.3 billion in April from NZ$8.68 billion in the previous month.Personal consumer new lending decreased to NZ$223 million from NZ$259 million. New lending for business fell to NZ$4 billion from NZ$4.38 billion.Lending for agricultural purposes fell to NZ$1.29 billion from NZ$1.42 billion. Other new lending decreased to NZ$345 million from NZ$384 million.

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