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Main Street economy catches fire with January jobs report as expert credits Trump’s tax certainty

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Main Street economy catches fire with January jobs report as expert credits Trump's tax certainty

Washington skeptics were quieted Wednesday morning as the January jobs report beat expectations, revealing a resilient American workforce that added 130,000 jobs to start the year.

While experts predicted a winter chill for hiring, the 4.3% unemployment rate tells a different story — one of a Main Street economy — showing renewed strength. According to Patrice Onwuka of the Independent Women’s Center for Economic Opportunity, this isn’t just a lucky break; it’s the direct result of “one big, beautiful bill” giving businesses the tax certainty they need to build, hire and grow.

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“Today’s January jobs report is strong and, importantly, beat expectations. This should inspire more hope for unemployed workers, but also boost confidence in the economy among Americans broadly,” Onwuka told Fox News Digital.

“Workers are being drawn back into the labor force because they believe they can find work,” she added. “Also, the tax cuts will boost employment. As workers also realize just how much the Working Families Tax Cuts… rewards hard work through no taxes on tips and no taxes on overtime, it may draw people back into the labor force or encourage those already working to stack up earnings by increasing their hours and effort.”

BESSENT SAYS TRUMP TAX CUTS COULD MEAN ‘SUBSTANTIAL REFUNDS’ FOR WORKING AMERICANS IN 2026

The Labor Department on Wednesday reported that employers added 130,000 jobs in January. That figure was above the expectations of economists polled by LSEG, who estimated the economy would add 70,000 jobs.

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People line up for job fair

People line up as they wait for the Mega JobNewsUSA South Florida Job Fair to open at the Amerant Bank Arena on April 30, 2025. (Getty Images)

The unemployment rate was 4.3%, slightly lower than economists’ expectations of 4.4%.

“Employment is a lagging indicator, not a leading one,” Onwuka noted. “With the economy accelerating from just under 4% in Q2 to 4.4% in Q3, we are starting to see that growth show up in hiring. The Dow hitting new highs is great for those invested in the stock market, but job creation gets people on Main Street back to work.”

“Importantly, these are not public sector — government jobs — that are supported by our tax dollars, but the fruit of businesses confident about demand, sales, reduced cuts from deregulation and greater tax certainty, thanks to the Working Families Tax Cuts — i.e., One Big Beautiful Bill — that they are able to start hiring,” she said. “Look for more of this in 2026 as this federal pro-growth economic agenda works.”

While the headline showed 130,000 jobs added, those gains were concentrated almost entirely in healthcare and construction. Meanwhile, retail trade lost 25,000 jobs and financial activities lost 7,000. Economists often consider these traditional “office and shop” jobs that provide steady, climate-controlled, middle-class employment.

“Retail job losses are not surprising as retailers shed temporary, holiday season jobs that surged to accommodate the biggest holiday shopping season in history. Financial services experienced big job losses in 2025 due to high interest rates and AI replacing work. Americans should not be fearful of these narrow pockets of losses but see the growing opportunities in many industries that deliver middle-class and high-paying jobs in healthcare and personal services,” Onwuka explained.

“These are exciting careers for women which often provide a level of flexibility that traditional 9-to-5 jobs do not offer and the fulfillment. As baby boomers retire and live longer, demand for employment and supporting businesses in these sectors will only grow,” she continued.

Other notable strengths in the first jobs report of the new year include declines in the number of people working part-time jobs because they couldn’t find full-time work and the number of those unemployed for more than six months. Labor force participation rose overall for U.S. men and women.

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“It takes time for hiring to rebound, but trends are moving in the right direction, and it may take some patience for unemployed individuals — or those looking to leave their jobs — to land their next job,” the economist advised.

“Pivoting may be appropriate for those who can’t wait. Perhaps it’s time to consider self-employment, freelance work or adding extra work,” Onwuka encouraged. “The growth of multiple jobholders is a sign that people are looking for extra income and turning to side jobs and side hustles… Increasingly, independent contract work for seasoned professionals and gig workers is the way Americans cobble together financial security. That should be respected and protected.”

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FOX Business’ Eric Revell contributed to this report.

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Fortescue commissions electric iron ore trains

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Fortescue commissions electric iron ore trains

Fortescue’s battery electric locomotives have begun trials on the iron ore miner’s Pilbara rail network.

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Sushovan Nayak sees short-term AI jitters, long-term opportunities for IT giants

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Sushovan Nayak sees short-term AI jitters, long-term opportunities for IT giants
Indian IT stocks have felt pressure recently as global developments in artificial intelligence spark fresh concerns among investors. News of China ramping up its AI innovation, coupled with new product launches from international AI platforms, has triggered a wave of sentiment-driven selling in the sector.

Speaking to ET Now, Sushovan Nayak from Anand Rathi highlighted the broader context behind this market reaction. “So, basically as you would be aware, Anthropic coming up with its [product] after that there was this Altruist, which was a [platform] which basically also got released and then the China bit which you are mentioning. So these will have a sentimental negative impact on Indian IT,” he said.

Nayak added that while these developments could create short-term pain, the long-term fundamentals of Indian IT remain strong. “The question is, if you look at, let us say, an OpenAI or an Anthropic, both of them are planning to go public. So, they will come up with these plug-ins almost at regular intervals. Each time they come up with that it will be another death knell on Indian IT, but I believe that this is going to be much more resilient. But there will be some short-term pain, which obviously we are going through, so that is what my limited submission is.”

He emphasized the continuing importance of implementation and customization of software, where Indian IT firms maintain a competitive edge. “At the end of the day, you need to implement and customise those softwares. So that is where Indian IT comes through. And with those hyperscalers putting in the amount of capex—like earlier in 2025 it was almost $400 billion for the top four, now coming to $600 billion—at the end of the day you need to have cloud transformation, data governance, data cleaning, and all of that stuff, where you end up becoming implementation partners for either a Databricks or a Snowflakes, who will [require] significant amount of work,” he noted.

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When asked about valuations, Nayak said he is cautiously optimistic. “I would want to see how these folks go about, like both OpenAI and Anthropic, because if they keep on releasing such disruptive models every alternate day, then we become sentimentally negative. Obviously, I would gradually increase my buying in these, but I would possibly start looking at them for sure. I mean, Infosys has obviously been top pickers and will continue to be—it is such that these are disruptive times, so yes, that is a way I will look at it.”


Regarding opportunities in the market, Nayak expressed confidence in large-cap IT stocks. “As I had also mentioned earlier, we basically are still positive on large-cap IT, and I completely understand that there is legacy IT work that is also there which will potentially get disrupted. But the ones within the large-caps which are most adaptable or are leveraging on their gen AI tools to a larger extent, someone like an Infosys, someone like an LTIM or an HCL Tech, these are the ones which we like,” he said.
He further highlighted HCL Tech’s ER&D exposure as a source of resilience. “HCL Tech, because of the ER&D exposure, because 75% of their business is services and the other 25%—that is 15% ER&D, 10% would be around HCL Software—I think that would be a little more resilient in all of this. But as I said, this is more of sentimental things rather than creating a very structural decline in all of them, that is what at least my view is, but stand corrected on this.”Despite the current nervousness, experts suggest that Indian IT’s structural strengths and ability to partner in global AI and cloud initiatives should help the sector navigate these uncertain times.

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If Software Is Dead, Microsoft Stock Wins (NASDAQ:MSFT)

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If Software Is Dead, Microsoft Stock Wins (NASDAQ:MSFT)

This article was written by

James Foord is an economist by trade and has been analyzing global markets for the past decade. He leads the investing group The Pragmatic Investor where the focus is on building robust and truly diversified portfolios that will continually preserve and increase wealth.
The Pragmatic Investor covers global macro, international equities, commodities, tech and cryptocurrencies and is designed to guide investors of all levels in their journey. Features include a The Pragmatic Investor Portfolio, weekly market update newsletter, actionable trades, technical analysis, and a chat room. Learn more.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of MSFT either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Review: In search of southern serenity

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Review: In search of southern serenity

REVIEW: The silence is the point in the state’s southern forests.

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Stocks Wavering Ahead of Jobs Report

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Stocks Little Changed After Fed Decision

Stocks Wavering Ahead of Jobs Report

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US-India trade deal revives FII interest, but AI threat clouds earnings and jobs: Saurabh Mukherjea

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US-India trade deal revives FII interest, but AI threat clouds earnings and jobs: Saurabh Mukherjea
Markets have seen a shift in sentiment following the finalisation of the US-India trade agreement, with foreign institutional investors (FIIs) beginning to return after months of heavy selling. However, despite policy stimulus and improving quarterly numbers, concerns over earnings growth and the disruptive impact of artificial intelligence on jobs and business models are emerging as key risks.

Speaking to ET Now, Marcellus Investment Managers’ Founder Saurabh Mukherjea said the long-anticipated US-India free trade agreement has been a major trigger for renewed foreign investor interest.

“As we expected for many months, the US-India FTA would be the trigger, the comfort that foreign investors need to reconsider India seriously. Those months that America had a 50% tariff slammed on us, we really were not in the reckoning globally. I do not think any foreign investor would seriously consider us then. But now that it looks like the worst is behind us and the proper FTA itself will get signed in a couple of months, foreign investors are interested again.”

However, Mukherjea cautioned that serious foreign inflows are still being held back by a lack of confidence in earnings growth, despite multiple policy measures aimed at reviving the economy.

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“What is holding back serious money is still the lack of confidence in earnings growth. Earnings growth has been decent this season, better than Q2 which was dismal. But given the potency of the GST cut, of the income tax cuts that the FM delivered last year, and 125 bps of rate cuts, it is literally full-on stimulus to juice up the economy. Given all of that, the earnings are still not doing justice to the sheer effort the government and the RBI are putting in to revive the economy, and that is worrying several investors including us.”


While pockets such as FMCG and automobiles have delivered stronger results, Mukherjea said broader consumption has not shown the buoyancy many had expected. He pointed to artificial intelligence as a key structural factor weighing on middle-class employment and spending.
“There are bright spots. FMCG has had a good earning season, auto has been having a good earning season now for a couple of quarters. But across the piece, in totality, we are still not seeing the buoyancy in consumption that we had expected. And the reason for that is the AI impact. I think jobs are going. Companies are obviously keeping quiet about it, but jobs are going.”He added that the impact is already visible in certain real estate markets.

“You can see the impact on real estate markets such as Hyderabad and Bangalore where residential real estate demand has conked off pretty seriously, and that is something we now need to take into account.”

With the trade deal largely in place, Mukherjea said his firm is increasing exposure to export-oriented manufacturers, but warned that the broader focus will now shift to how deeply AI affects employment and consumption.

“The US trade deal is done, or the crux of it is done. People like us are beginning to increase weights in export-oriented manufacturers. We are hoping to make more money from our export-oriented manufacturing plays. But a lot of focus will now shift on what is the potency of AI’s impact in terms of taking out middle-class jobs.”

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Addressing the ongoing weakness in IT services stocks, Mukherjea said the selling pressure may not be over yet, pointing to similar trends playing out in the US.

“There is plenty to go here. If you just step back and think about it, there is a broader story. If you look at the selloff in America in the brokerage and wealth management names, the broker and wealth management names have lost almost 20% of their market cap in America this week.”

He said markets are increasingly discounting the vulnerability of intermediary-driven business models.

“What the market is increasingly discounting in the United States is not just traditional coding, but almost any type of information intermediation. Any business which is in the business of taking lots of data, condensing it, and giving the customer a view and then a service on the back of that view — whether it be hotel bookings or IT services or strategy advice or stock recommendations — that whole piece is at risk.”

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Mukherjea warned that this disruption will extend well beyond IT services and could fundamentally reshape multiple white-collar industries, including asset and wealth management.

“I do not think this is going to be limited to IT services. The disruption AI is causing is a fundamental rebuilding of business models not just in IT services but even say in our industry.”

On the future of large IT services firms, Mukherjea outlined three major layers of impact: consolidation, changes in the nature of services, and a sharp reduction in employment.

“The first is that I do not think there will be this many IT services companies a decade out. We have too many IT services companies not just in India but across the world, and there simply is not that much need.”

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He said the nature of IT services will also shift away from traditional coding.

“The type of service will change. It will be far less time and materials. It will be far less coding. There will be far more business architecture and strategy advice bundled into it.”

Most significantly, Mukherjea expects employment levels in the sector to fall sharply.

“By orders of magnitude, the number of people employed in this industry will reduce. Just to give a broad sense, I think TCS employs 600,000 people. Microsoft would be around 200,000–250,000. A firm like OpenAI will be around 2,000, and DeepSeek employs 200 people.”

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He added that job losses are already visible in data from recruitment platforms.

“From what I can see in the Naukri numbers, this sector is shedding jobs already at the rate of 10–15% a year. So that story has a long way to go.”

Mukherjea concluded that while export manufacturing may benefit from global trade realignments, AI-led disruption will force multiple industries to rethink business models and employment structures over the coming years.

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Salesforce and 10 More Stocks That Have Cratered and Look Like Buys

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Salesforce and 10 More Stocks That Have Cratered and Look Like Buys

Salesforce and 10 More Stocks That Have Cratered and Look Like Buys

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Bluespring Snaps Up $2.3 Billion Massachusetts Advisory Firm

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Bluespring Snaps Up $2.3 Billion Massachusetts Advisory Firm

Bluespring Snaps Up $2.3 Billion Massachusetts Advisory Firm

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China, Mexico held talks amid trade tensions over tariffs

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China, Mexico held talks amid trade tensions over tariffs


China, Mexico held talks amid trade tensions over tariffs

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Viking Therapeutics, Inc. (VKTX) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Q4: 2026-02-11 Earnings Summary

EPS of -$1.38 misses by $0.48

 | Revenue of $0.00 beats by $0.00

Viking Therapeutics, Inc. (VKTX) Q4 2025 Earnings Call February 11, 2026 4:30 PM EST

Company Participants

Brian Lian – President, CEO & Director
Gregory Zante – Chief Financial Officer
Neil Aubuchon – Chief Commercial Officer

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Conference Call Participants

Stephanie Diaz – Vida Strategic Partners, Inc.
Timur Ivannikov – Cantor Fitzgerald & Co., Research Division
Joon Lee – Truist Securities, Inc., Research Division
Hardik Parikh – JPMorgan Chase & Co, Research Division
Tsan-Yu Hsieh – William Blair & Company L.L.C., Research Division
William Wood – B. Riley Securities, Inc., Research Division
Jiale Song – Jefferies LLC, Research Division
Annabel Samimy – Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated, Research Division
Biren Amin – Piper Sandler & Co., Research Division
Rohit Bhasin – Morgan Stanley, Research Division
Thomas Smith – Leerink Partners LLC, Research Division
Yale Jen – Laidlaw & Company (UK) Ltd., Research Division
Ryan Deschner – Raymond James & Associates, Inc., Research Division

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Presentation

Operator

Welcome to the Viking Therapeutics Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Financial Results Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded today, February 11, 2026.

I would now like to turn the call over to Viking’s Manager of Investor Relations, Ms. Stephanie Diaz. Please go ahead, Stephanie.

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Stephanie Diaz
Vida Strategic Partners, Inc.

Hello, and thank you all for participating in today’s call. Joining me today is Brian Lian, Viking’s President and CEO; and Greg Zante, Viking’s CFO.

Before we begin, I’d like to caution that comments made during this conference call today, February 11, 2026, will contain forward-looking statements under the safe harbor provisions of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements about Viking’s expectations regarding its development activities, time lines and milestones. Forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially and adversely, and reported results should not be considered as an indication of future performance.

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