(Corrects location of source in line 50 to San Francisco)
* Global stock markets recover after weak U.S. jobs data
* U.S. unemployment rate hits 10.2 percent, above forecast
* Crude oil prices falls on expected decline in demand
* Yen rises against dollar and euro (Recasts, adds comments, updates prices, changes byline, dateline, previous LONDON)
NEW YORK, Nov 6 (Reuters) - Global equity markets rebounded on Friday from the initial scare brought on by a grim U.S. jobs report after investors decided the data were not so bad.
However, the U.S. dollar and oil prices didn't benefit from this shift in market sentiment.
While U.S. President
U.S. employers cut 190,000 jobs last month. Economists polled ahead of the data had expected 175,000 job cuts and an unemployment rate of 9.9 percent.
The Japanese yen rose against both the greenback
"The real shocker is the unemployment rate," said Joseph Trevisani, senior market analyst at FX Solutions in Saddle River, New Jersey. "The Fed will stay on hold even longer with less likelihood of giving a concrete answer as to when and how to withdraw quantitative easing."
Recently the weak global economic environment has led investors to buy U.S. dollars for safety. However Friday's data fueled the argument that the
HELPING HANDS
Helping to overshadow the jobs report were two analyst upgrades on shares of U.S. conglomerate General Electric (
"The headline (U.S.) numbers look terrible, but for traders and investors looking for trends, a closer look at the report shows that there is a trend of slowed job losses," said Randy Frederick, director of trading and derivatives at Charles Schwab & Co, Inc in San Francisco.
European share prices also managed to turn higher, with bank stocks leading the way. Part-nationalized Royal Bank of Scotland gained 5.3 percent after it said it more than halved third-quarter losses as impairments fell. [ID:nL6671701]
At 1 p.m. (1800 GMT), the major U.S. stock indexes were all higher. The Dow Jones industrial average was up 24.64 points, or 0.25 percent, at 10,030.60. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose 3.04 points, or 0.29 percent, at 1,069.67. The
The MSCI world equity index rose 0.36 percent while the emerging markets index gained 0.75 percent.
European stocks recovered early losses as the FTSEurofirst 300 index gained 0.2 percent, up 1.6 percent for the week. Tokyo's benchmark Nikkei (news) rose 0.74 percent to 9,789.35 on Friday after marking a one-month closing low on Thursday. The Nikkei lost 2.44 percent for the week.
Crude
Spot gold broke through the $1,100-an-ounce barrier, touching a record $1,100.90 before retreating to $1,094.10, still up $3.55 or 0.33 percent on the day
Benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury
In euro zone government bonds, the two-year Schatz
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