The Daily Courier

Stocks rally after Fed hike to fight inflation

- By STAN CHOE

NEW YORK — Stocks rose in roller-coaster trading on Wall Street Wednesday following the Federal Reserve’s sharpest hike to interest rates since 1994, and its assurance that such mega-hikes would not be common.

The S&P 500 was 1.3% higher in afternoon trading after several sudden moves up and down immediatel­y after the Fed’s announceme­nt. Treasury yields were sharply lower but also jerked up and down as investors struggled to digest the third interest-rate hike of the year and what Chair Jerome Powell said about future moves.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average swung between a gain of 530 points and a loss of nearly 180 before sitting on a gain of 344 points, as of 3 p.m. Eastern time. It was up 1.1% at 30,709, while the Nasdaq composite was 2.5% higher.

The Fed hiked its key short-term interest rate by three-quarters of a percentage pint, triple the usual move, in its quest to beat back high inflation. Powell said the Fed may consider an increase of either half a point or three-quarters of a point at its next meeting in July before increases may fall back to more normal amounts.

“The Fed is serious about inflation,” said Brian Jacobsen, senior investment strategist at Allspring Global Investment­s. “Instead of trying to let it naturally fall they want to give it a good shove even if it means slowing growth” for the economy.

Investment­s around the world, from bonds to bitcoin, have tumbled this year as high inflation forces the Federal Reserve and other central banks to swiftly remove supports propped underneath markets early in the pandemic. The fear is that too-aggressive hikes in interest rates will force the economy into a recession.

The Fed is “not tying to induce a recession now, let’s be clear about that,” Powell said. He said Wednesday’s big increase was about the Fed speeding up the move to get interest rates back to normal more than anything, calling it “front-end loading.”

Even if central banks pull off the delicate trick of slowing the economy just enough to stamp out inflation, without a recession, higher interest rates push down on prices for investment­s regardless. The hardest-hit have been the investment­s that soared the most in

the easy-money era of ultralow interest rates, including high-growth technology stocks and cryptocurr­encies.

Treasury yields have shot to their highest levels in more than a decade on expectatio­ns for a more aggressive Fed, though they eased Wednesday following Powell’s comments. A disappoint­ing report showing sales at U.S. retailers unexpected­ly slumped in May from April contribute­d, and so did weaker-thanexpect­ed manufactur­ing in New York state.

The economy is still largely holding up amid a red-hot job market, but it has shown some signs of distress recently. A preliminar­y reading on consumer sentiment last week, for example, sank to its lowest reading on record due in large part to high gasoline prices.

The two-year Treasury yield fell to 3.26% from 3.45% late Tuesday, with the biggest move happening after Powell said not to expect 0.75 percentage point rate hikes to be common. The yield on the 10-year Treasury pulled back to 3.36% from 3.48%.

“The bond market right now is driving the broader market and that will continue,” said Jay Hatfield, CEO of Infrastruc­ture Capital Advisors.

Cryptocurr­ency prices continued to sink, and bitcoin dropped as low as $20,087.90,

nearly 71% below its record of $68,990.90 set late last year. It was down 2.2% at $21,652 in afternoon trading, according to CoinDesk.

Its tumble has worsened as investors ramp up their expectatio­ns for how aggressive­ly the Fed will move on interest rates.

A week ago, almost no one was expecting a hike of three-quarters of a percentage point, which is the widespread expectatio­n for this afternoon. But a stunning report on Friday sent shudders through markets when it showed inflation at the consumer level unexpected­ly accelerate­d last month.

It dashed hopes on Wall Street that inflation may have already peaked, and the data seemingly pinned the Federal Reserve into having to get more aggressive. The Fed has gotten criticism for moving too slowly earlier to rein in inflation. Other central banks around the world are also raising interest rates, adding to the pressure.

Markets were more relaxed Wednesday, with stocks climbing across Europe and some of Asia. Stocks in Shanghai gained 0.5% after government data showed Chinese factory activity rebounded in May as anti-virus controls that shut down businesses in Shanghai and other industrial centers eased. Stocks in Seoul and Tokyo, though, fell more than 1%.

 ?? ?? The Associated Press
As the Federal Reserve announces a rate change, traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York, Wednesday.
The Associated Press As the Federal Reserve announces a rate change, traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York, Wednesday.

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