Stocks @ Night is a daily newsletter delivered after hours, giving you a first look at tomorrow and last look at today. Sign up for free to receive it directly in your inbox. Here’s what CNBC TV’s producers were watching as investors rotated out of tech names, and what’s on the radar for the next session. The jobs report for December The payrolls number comes out live on “Squawk Box” at 8:30 a.m. ET with Becky Quick, Andrew Ross Sorkin and Joe Kernen. Economists polled by Dow Jones predict 73,000 additional jobs. Going into the number, the U.S 10-year Treasury yield is 4.17%. The two-year yield is 3.49%. The one-year yield is 3.5%. The six-month yield is 3.6%. The three-month yield is 3.61%. The one-month yield is 3.62%. The State Street SPDR Bloomberg High Yield Bond ETF (JNK) has a dividend yield of 6.52%. The iShares iBoxx High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (HYG) has a dividend yield of 5.69%. The iShares 0-5 Year High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (SHYG) has a dividend yield of 7%. The iShares 0-5 Year High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (FCOR) has a dividend yield of 4.47%. Big Oil in our nation’s capital Several big names at major oil companies are set to meet with President Donald Trump. CNBC TV’s Brian Sullivan will be there with them. Watch for his reports all day long, starting at 5 a.m. on “Worldwide Exchange” with Frank Holland. In the four trading days since U.S. forces arrested Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro, Chevron is up 2.15%. It is off 6% from the March 2025 high. ExxonMobil is flat week to date. Shares are off 2.4% from the 52-week high. SLB is is up 10.5% in four days. The stock is slightly off the high reached this month. Out of whack Jim Cramer of “Mad Money” said it on the big show at 6 p.m. Thursday night: “Sometimes things just get out of whack with stocks at the start of the year.” The Dow Industrials jumped 270 points Thursday, about 0.5%. The Nasdaq Composite fell 0.4%. So far in 2026, the Nasdaq is up 1%, and the Dow is up 2.5%. The S & P 500 is up 1.1% Consumer discretionary is the sector leader week to date, up 4.6%. Materials is up about 3%. Only two sectors are down on the week: Utilities is on pace for a 2.8% decline, and tech is off about 1%. General Motors The automaker is taking another charge on its electric vehicle business. CNBC TV’s Phil LeBeau reports it will include a $6 billion impairment charge when GM reports quarterly results Jan. 27. The stock was up nearly 4% on Thursday. It is down slightly after hours. GM is near its high. The stock has gained 63% in six months. Ford has risen 23% in that same time period. Intel The stock rose nearly 2% after hours. It fell 3.6% in Thursday’s regular trading. Trump posted on Truth Social Thursday evening: “I just finished a great meeting with the very successful Intel CEO, Lip-Bu Tan.” Intel has had a big six months, up 74%. The U.S. government made an investment in the chip company last August.
Friday’s big stock stories: What’s likely to move the market in the next trading session
Jan 9, 2026