US equity markets ended the week on a mixed note as investors pondered the implications of another strong monthly jobs report - Dow slipped -46-points or -0.15%, The broader S&P500 dipped -0.08%, snapping a four session winning streak (the indice’s best winning stretch since late March), with the Materials sector (down -1.00%) leading nine of the eleven primary sectors lower. Healthcare (up +0.27%) and Information Technology (+0.07%) were the only two primary sectors to advance. The Nasdaq added +0.12%, extending the technology-centric index’s rebound into a fifth straight session, its longest winning streak since November. Tesla Inc rose +2.27% after the company shipped a record 78,906 vehicles in China in June, according to China Passenger Car Association data. Tesla’s best month before that was December 2021, when wholesale deliveries topped 70,800. Tesla shipped ~113K vehicles from its Shanghai plant in the second quarter, down ~38% from 182,174 in the first quarter and illustrating the impact COVID-19 has had on recent results. Year to date, Tesla’s share of Chinese wholesale new energy vehicles (NEV) shipments - a category that includes plug-in hybrids and battery-electric vehicles - is down to ~12% from 15% in the first half of 2021. Twitter Inc fell -5.1% (and was down a further -4.81% in extended trading) following a Washington Post report that reported that Elon Musk was planning to back out of his takeover offer for the social media company. Confirmation came after the market close in a filing reporting that the Tesla Chief Executive’s lawyers had sent a letter to Twitter terminating the deal, saying the social media company had “not complied with its contractual obligation” and asserting that it breached terms of the agreement by refusing to provide detailed information about fake accounts on the site. The small capitalisation Russell 2000 dipped -0.01%.