Jul 6 (Reuters) - The Ibex-35 was affected by the uneasiness of global markets at the opening on Friday, as markets await the monthly data on job creation in the United States, which could define the direction of the Federal Reserve (Fed) in the short term.

The official US June jobs report, the highlight of the day, will be released at 16:30 GMT following a private payrolls data released on Thursday that showed a much higher-than-expected June increase and confirmed the resilience of the US labor market despite the Fed's rate hikes to tame inflation.

The data is expected to show a slowdown in job growth in June with 225,000 jobs created, down from 339,000 in the previous month, although it is still a solid labor market, which along with a strong service sector, will influence a Fed that has preferred to study the data more when deciding on upcoming rate hikes.

"Following yesterday's data, +25bp probabilities for the 26-July Fed (>90%), with IRRs (debt yields) rebounding strongly (+17 bp on the 2-year at 5.12%, surpassing 5% for the first time since before the US regional banking crisis last March, and +15 bp on the 10-year at 4.08%) and increasing fears of a monetary policy error that excessively slows the economy," wrote the experts at the Renta4 analysis house.

At 07:12 GMT on Friday, the selective Spanish stock market index Ibex-35 was down 75.30 points, or 0.81%, to 9,209.70 points, while the FTSE Eurofirst 300 index of large European stocks was down 0.41%.

In the banking sector, Santander lost 0.18%, BBVA fell 0.26%, Caixabank gave up 0.08%, Sabadell gained 0.61%, Bankinter gained 0.86%, and Unicaja Banco rose 0.87%.

Among the large non-financial stocks, Telefónica fell 0.63%, Inditex gave up 0.23%, Iberdrola dropped 3.55% after receiving a cut in its recommendation from Goldman Sachs the day before, Cellnex fell 0.89%, and the oil company Repsol lost 1.90%.

Outside the Ibex, Airtificial Intelligence rose 5%, after having announced several high-tech and automation projects the day before, including four worth 20.2 million euros.

(Information by José Muñoz; edited by Tomás Cobos)