New York Post

‘FRIED’ DAY ON STREET

Inflation tanks stocks

- By THOMAS BARRABI

Stocks plummeted Friday as data showing inflation accelerate­d to a fresh fourdecade high in May rattled Wall Street and sent indexes to another week of losses.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled 880 points or 2.7%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq index slid 414.21 points, or 3.5%, while the broad-based S&P 500 sank 116.96 points, or 2.9%.

All three indexes posted their biggest weekly percentage declines since January.

The CBOE Volatility Index, known as Wall Street’s “fear gauge,” jumped nearly 5% to 27.91 points.

Both major oil price benchmarks, West Texas Intermedia­te and Brent crude, were hovering above $120 per barrel as the RussiaUkra­ine war and surging demand upend global energy markets.

The volatility also shook cryptocurr­encies, which have moved in tandem with the stock market in recent months. Bitcoin sank more than 2% to $29,077.

The latest Consumer Price Index data added to the fears regarding the Federal Reserve’s ability to engineer a “soft landing” for the economy while hiking interest rates. Prices surged by a higher-than-expected 8.6% in May, their fastest rate of increase since 1981.

The inflation numbers also added to volatility that has weighed on stocks for the last several months.

Investors are concerned that the Fed won’t be able to combat red-hot inflation without triggering an economic recession.

May’s steep inflation figure was driven largely by the higher cost of gasoline, which has hit record highs in recent days. Overall consumer prices jumped 1% in May compared to the previous month. Haven’t hit ‘peak’

“Friday’s inflation data suggests the ‘peak inflation’ debate may be premature,” said Nancy Davis, founder of Quadratic Capital Management. “The idea of peak inflation assumes that our supply chain disruption­s are over and won’t recur anytime soon, and I’m not so sure we can be confident of that.”

Fed Chair Jerome Powell has already indicated that the central bank is likely to enact larger-than-normal half-percentage-point rate hikes at meetings later this month, with another expected in July. In May, the Fed hiked rates by a halfpercen­tage point for the first time since 2000.

While some analysts have suggested the Fed could pause its hikes in September to assess economic conditions, the steep inflation number in May could add to the bank’s urgency.

Fed Vice Chair Lael Brainard said this month that she felt it was “very hard to see the case for a pause.”

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