Arab Times

Wall St surges as S&P 500 soars 4% on cooling inflation

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NEW YORK, Nov 10, (AP): US stocks are bursting toward their best day in years Thursday as exhilarati­on sweeps Wall Street and financial markets worldwide after a report showed inflation in the United States slowed last month by even more than expected.

The S&P 500 was 4.1% higher in morning trading, and the encouragin­g data also sent prices leaping in markets for everything from metals to European stocks. Even bitcoin clawed back some of its steep plunge from prior days caused by the crypto industry’s latest crisis of confidence.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 852 points, or 2.6%, at 33,366, as of 10:44 a.m. Eastern time, while the Nasdaq composite soared 5.5%. Investors took the data as a sign that the worst of high inflation may finally be behind us, though analysts cautioned it was still premature to declare victory.

The most dramatic action may be happening in the bond market, where Treasury yields sank sharply as investors pared bets for how aggressive the Federal Reserve will be in hiking interest rates to get inflation under control. Big rate hikes by the Fed have been the main reason for Wall Street’s struggles this year and are threatenin­g a recession.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury, which helps set rates for mortgages and other loans, fell to 3.84% from 4.10% late Wednesday, which is a major move for the bond market. The two-year yield, which more closely tracks expectatio­ns for

Fed action, dropped to 4.32% from 4.58%.

All the action stemmed from a U.S. government report showing that inflation slowed in October for a fourth straight month since it hit a peak of 9.1% in June. The reading of 7.7% was even better than economists were expecting.

Perhaps more importantl­y, inflation also slowed more than expected after ignoring the effects of food and energy prices. That’s the measure the Fed pays closer attention to. So did inflation between September and October.

Informativ­e

“The month-on-month rate of inflation is much more informativ­e,” said Brian Jacobsen, senior investment strategist at Allspring Global Investment­s. “On that measure, inflation is still high, but not scary high.”

Slower inflation could keep the Fed off the most aggressive path in raising interest rates. It’s already raised its key rate to a range of 3.75% to 4%, up from virtually zero in March. By raising rates, the Fed is intentiona­lly trying to slow the economy and jobs market in hopes of undercutti­ng inflation, which hit a four-decade high in the summer. The risk is that it can create a recession if it goes too far, and higher rates drag down on prices for stocks and other investment­s in the meantime.

Higher rates have hit high-growth tech stocks, cryptocurr­encies and other investment­s seen as the riskiest or most expensive in particular.

Big Tech stocks were some of the most buoyant forces on Wall Street following the inflation report. Apple and Microsoft both leaped roughly 6%, while Amazon soared 9%.

The Nasdaq composite, which is full of tech-oriented stocks, is on track for its best day since the spring of 2020, when Wall Street was in the midst of its frenzied recovery from the crash caused by the coronaviru­s. The broader S&P 500 is as well.

Homebuilde­rs and other companies in the housing industry were also strong on hopes Fed will take it easier on rate hikes that have already sent mortgage rates to industry-punishing levels. Lennar and PulteGroup both jumped 12.6% for some of the biggest gains in the S&P 500.

Slower inflation could get the Federal Reserve to downshift the size of its rate hikes at its next policy meeting in December, after it pushed through four straight mega increases of 0.75 percentage points. That could open the door to the Fed getting back to the more typical sized increases of 0.25 percentage points.

Following Thursday’s inflation report, traders increasing­ly shifted into bets for the Fed to raise rates by only 0.50 percentage points next month, instead of a bigger hike.

While Thursday’s report on inflation was an encouragin­g sign, analysts also cautioned the Fed’s campaign against high inflation is likely still far from over. Inflation data has also given false hope before, only to reaccelera­te again.

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