Stocks on Wall Street were little changed earlier this morning, as markets reacted cautiously to a solid employment report after the previous session's sell-off pushed stocks lower.
There were 242,000 new private-sector jobs created in February, more than double the level in January and significantly more than analysts predicted, according to the latest ADP report.
Those figures come ahead of Friday's closely watched government jobs report for February, a key piece of data that the Federal Reserve will consider when setting interest rates at its meeting at the end of the month as a guide to what level to set interest rates at.
There was no change in the Dow Jones Industrial Average at 32,863.14 about 20 minutes after the market opened.
There was only a slight increase of less than 0.1 percent in the broad-based S&P 500 Index, which closed at 3,987.95, while the technology-rich Nasdaq Composite Index closed at 11,528.55.
After Fed Chair Jerome Powell told a Senate panel on Tuesday that the US central bank could hike rates more than expected to tame inflation, major US indices fell more than one percent on Tuesday.
It is expected that Powell will undergo a second day of testimony before the House of Representatives today.
CrowdStrike Holdings jumped by 4.8 percent among individual companies after the cybersecurity firm beat expectations with a forecast that surpassed expected revenues as well as a sharply higher earnings report.
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