Houston Chronicle

Stocks rise as Fed likely to keep rates low

- By Stan Choe

NEW YORK — Wall Street rallied to records on Friday after the head of the Federal Reserve said it’s still far from pulling interest rates off the record low that’s helped markets soar, even if it does begin dialing back its support for the economy later this year.

The S&P 500 rose 39.37, or 0.9 percent, to 4,509.37 to top its prior all-time high set on Wednesday, part of a widespread rally that swept up everything from bonds to gold. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 242.68 points, or 0.7 percent, to 34,455.80, and the Nasdaq composite gained 183.69, or 1.2 percent, to 15,129.50.

Stocks have set record after record this year thanks in large part to the Federal Reserve’s massive efforts to prop up the economy and financial markets. But the gains had grown more tentative as the beginning of the end of the Fed’s assistance came into sight, now that the unemployme­nt rate has dropped and inflation has picked up.

After a long-anticipate­d speech by Fed Chair Jerome Powell, many investors took his tone as a sign the Fed will keep supporting the market with low interest rates, which can act like steroids for stocks. In the lingo of Wall Street, it was “dovish” in tone rather than “hawkish,” which would have advocated for a quicker rise in rates.

“He not as much spoke it as he cooed it,” said Ernesto Ramos, U.S. chief investment officer at BMO Global Asset Management. “He was super dovish.”

Stocks of companies whose profits are most closely tied to the economy made the biggest gains following the speech. Smaller companies were strong, with the small-cap Russell 2000 index up 2.9 percent, more than triple the gain for the big stocks in the S&P 500. They often do best when investors feel more optimistic about lower rates and a stronger economy.

“Markets are loving it,” Ramos said. But he also cautioned that the longer ultralow interest-rate policy helps to prop up the markets, the withdrawal may be worse once it’s finally exhausted.

“It strengthen­s our view that markets will continue to do well this year,” he said. But “when the accommodat­ion is fully removed, how bad of a hangover will it be?

Just like a party, the hangover is less bad if you leave earlier.”

Treasury yields were lower, but only after some swings. After sitting at 1.35 percent shortly before Powell’s speech, the yield on the 10-year Treasury sank as Powell cited past instances in which policy makers prematurel­y raised interest rates on worries about short-term bursts in inflation, saying “such a mistake could be particular­ly harmful” now.

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