By Anora Mahmudova and Sara Sjolin, MarketWatch

Economy adds 257,000 jobs in January

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stocks moved higher on Friday on the back of a strong jobs report that signaled gathering momentum in the labor market, shifting the markets thinking to the timing of the Federal Reserve's first rate hike.

The Labor Department report showed that the economy added 257,000 jobs in January, while November and December numbers were revised sharply higher. Another good sign, hourly wages jumped 0.5%. Although the unemployment rate ticked up to 5.7% from 5.6%, it suggests that more people are entering the workforce. The U.S. economy added more than 200,000 jobs for 12 straight months.

The main indexes were set to book solid weekly gains. The S&P 500 (SPX) gained 0.5% to 2,072, with eight of its 10 main sectors trading higher. Financials and telecoms were leading the gains.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) was modestly higher with nearly 24 of its 30 members trading higher. JPMorgan Chase & Co was the top gainer among the blue-chips.

The Nasdaq Composite (RIXF) also moved higher.

Steven Wieting, global chief investment strategist at Citi Private Bank, said consistently higher job gains do not justify rates at zero.

"We have now had four years of 200,000 job gains on average and the latest trend suggest we have capacity to grow to absorb population growth. Zero interest rates are not appropriate at this juncture," Wieting said.

"While impending rate hikes, and we believe the Fed will raise rates this year, bring volatility to the stock market, ultimately, earnings growth and increased consumer spending, will drive markets higher. The continued strength of the dollar will make U.S. equities attractive to international investors, bringing in investments," he added.

Nonfarm frenzy: After a week focused on earnings, deals and Greece's tumultuous debt negotiations, attention has shifted back to hard economic numbers and earnings.

Before the jobs report, markets expected the first rate hike by December, but a robust report brought forward expectations to September, judging by the price of Fed funds rate futures, a widely used yardstick for measuring the market's rate-hike expectations.

Jon Hilsenrath, chief economics correspondent for The Wall Street Journal wrote that the strong jobs report keeps open the possibility the Federal Reserve could start rasing short-term interest rates in June.

The dollar rallied, with the dollar index (DXY) jumping 1%, while 10-year Treasury yields rose 11 basis points to 1.94% following the jobs report.

The Fed policy committee is scheduled to meet on March 17-18, with some analysts expecting a change in the tone of its monetary policy statement.

Fed speakers: Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart, a voting member of the Federal Open Market Committee, will speak on the economy to Southwest Florida Business Leaders at 12:45 p.m. Eastern Time.

Friday earnings: Moody's Corp. (MCO) jumped reported fourth-quarter earnings of $1.12 a share, beating a consensus estimate gathered from a FactSet survey.

Madison Square Garden Co.(MSGNV) shares also rose after beating on fourth-quarter earnings.

CBOE Holdings Inc. (CBOE) dropped as it reported earnings slightly lower than expectations.

Movers and shakers: Twitter Inc. (TWTR) surged 16% after the social-media company reported adjusted fourth-quarter earnings ahead of analyst expectations.

LinkedIn Corp. (LNKD) jumped 14%, after the social-networking company beat expectations for the fourth quarter.

GoPro Inc. (GPRO), on the other hand, slumped 11% after the maker of wearable video cameras posted results that easily beat expectations late Thursday, but then warned on the upcoming quarter and that its chief operating officer had resigned.

Pandora Media Inc. (P) sank 18% after the music-streaming service late Thursday reported fourth-quarter results where revenue and the 2015 outlook missed expectations.

Online travel-services provider Expedia Inc. (EXPE) reported a drop in fourth-quarter earnings late Thursday, sending the shares 11% lower.

Harris Corp. (HRS) and Exelis Inc. (XLS) said they have entered into a definitive agreement, where Harris will buy the aerospace and defense firm in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $23.75 per share, or an approximately $4.75 billion enterprise value. Shares of Exelis soared 35% and Harris jumped 7.5%.

Other markets: Oil futures continued to climb, setting the March crude contract (CLH5) on track for an 6.9% weekly advance. Metals (GCJ5) were mixed, while the dollar (DXY) fell against most major currencies.

Markets in Europe were hit by ongoing jitters about Greece's bailout program, after a Thursday meeting between Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis and his German counterpart Wolfgang Schäuble showed the two sides are far from reaching a debt deal. Asian markets closed mixed.

Read: Greece and Germany can't even agree to disagree

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