Las Vegas Review-Journal

Stocks climb as smaller banks recover

Meanwhile, inflation fell 0.4% in February to 6%, report says

- By Stan Choe and Alex Veiga

Stocks ended broadly higher on Wall Street Tuesday, as some of the most breathtaki­ng moves from a manic Monday reversed course.

The S&P 500 rose 1.7 percent after a report showed inflation is still high but heading lower. Stocks of smaller and midsized banks recovered some of their prior plunges caused by worries that customers could yank out all their cash. Treasury yields soared to trim their historic drops.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1.1 percent, while the Nasdaq composite added 2.1 percent. Gains in technology stocks, banks and communicat­ions services companies powered much of the rally.

A week ago, Wall Street was expecting Tuesday’s report on inflation to be the most important data of the week, if not the month. The worry at the time was that inflation is staying stubbornly high, which could force the Federal Reserve to pick up the pace again on its hikes to interest rates.

Such hikes can drive down inflation by slowing the economy, but they raise the risk of a recession later on. They also hurt prices for stocks, bonds and all kinds of other investment­s.

Tuesday’s report showed that inflation at the consumer level was 6 percent in February, versus a year before. That matched economists’ expectatio­ns and was a slowdown from January’s 6.4 percent inflation rate, but it’s still way above the Fed’s target.

In normal times, that could indeed call for an increase in the size of rate hikes. The trouble for the

Fed is that it’s also facing a banking system that may already be cracking due to all of its rate increases from the last year, which came at the fastest pace in decades.

“The Fed is stuck between a rock and a hard place,” said Brian Jacobsen, senior investment strategist at Allspring Global Investment­s.

“Inflation met expectatio­ns, but is still uncomforta­bly hot. Financial stresses are intense. Prudence would dictate they pause, but couple it with a stern warning that if inflation trends don’t improve that they might need to hike more.”

He said the Fed also has other tools to use besides rate increases. Among them: The Fed could adjust the speed at which it’s shrinking its massive trove of bond investment­s, an action that effectivel­y tightens the screws on the financial system.

An easier Fed could give the banking system and economy more breathing room, but it could also give inflation more oxygen.

Traders rushed Monday to place some bets that the Fed could decide to keep rates steady at its next meeting, instead of accelerati­ng to a hike of 0.50 percentage points as they thought a week ago. Following the inflation data, bets are largely falling on it sticking with an increase of 0.25 points later this month, according to data from CME Group.

All told Tuesday, the

S&P 500 rose 64.80 points to 3,920.56, ending a threeday losing streak. The Dow added 336.26 points to 32,155.40, and the Nasdaq gained 239.31 points to 11,428.15.

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