Kuwait Times

Stocks track Wall St record; US Fed keeps rate projection

- HONG KONG:

Markets rallied Thursday after Wall Street’s record-breaking day as traders welcomed news that the Federal Reserve still saw three interest rate cuts this year even after recent data pointed to a bounce in inflation. Decision-makers remained confident that prices will eventually be brought to heel after pushing borrowing costs to two-decade highs without doing too much harm to the US economy.

After a much-anticipate­d policy meeting, officials held rates for the fifth time in a row and released dot plot projection­s that showed they saw 75 basis points of cuts before year’s end, unchanged from December’s outlook. Observers suggested June would likely see the first move.

They also ramped up their forecasts for economic growth. Last year saw inflation come down dramatical­ly from the multi-decade highs seen in 2022, heading towards the bank’s two-percent goal, but it nudged back up in January and February, fuelling worries of a downward

revision to the Fed’s rate estimates.

Speaking after the meeting, boss Jerome Powell admitted “inflation is still too high” but added that the recent data “haven’t really changed the overall story, which is that of inflation moving down gradually on a sometimes bumpy road toward two percent”. The positive news was reinforced by a warning from European Central Bank chief Christine Lagarde that there was a risk in cutting too late, suggesting it could also make its first reduction in June.

“We cannot wait until we have all the relevant informatio­n,” she said. All three main indexes on Wall Street surged to record highs, led by tech giants including Amazon and Apple. The buying excitement flowed through to Asia, where Tokyo ended at another record high, while Hong Kong piled on nearly two percent. They were followed higher by Seoul, Sydney, Mumbai, Singapore, Taipei, Bangkok, Wellington, Manila and Jakarta. Shanghai dipped.

London, Paris, and Frankfurt rose at the open. “The absence of any particular­ly hawkish news provided a green light for the market to continue its upward trajectory,” said Stephen Innes at SPI Asset Management. “And why not, as a sturdy economy plus rate cuts is the best possible scenario, and it’s fair to suggest that it’s now the consensus.” IG Markets analyst Hebe Chen added that traders were relieved to get “a clearer view of the near-term picture”.

 ?? ?? NEW YORK: A woman walks her dog past the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) (left) at Wall Street in the Manhattan borough of New York. — AFP
NEW YORK: A woman walks her dog past the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) (left) at Wall Street in the Manhattan borough of New York. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait