The Palm Beach Post

Stocks turn lower on Fed hawkishnes­s

The S&P 500 retreats from two days of gains.

- By Sarah Ponczek and Eric J. Weiner

U.S. stocks turned mostly lower and Treasuries rose after minutes from the most recent Federal Reserve meeting showed that officials are leaning toward a slightly faster pace of tightening.

Oil rose to the highest level since 2014 amid escalating tensions in the Middle East and political dissonance in Washington.

The S&P 500 index retreated from earlier gains as investors digested the minutes from the Fed’s most recent meeting and grappled with President Donald Trump’s provocativ­e comments about Russia and his warning that America is preparing to attack Syria.

The small-cap Russell 2000 index rose, as those companies tend to have less internatio­nal exposure than larger businesses. Gold futures climbed for a fourth straight day.

“It’s shock and awe — tweets will continue, headlines will continue,” Yana Barton, equity portfolio manager at Eaton Vance, said in an interview at Bloomberg’s New York headquarte­rs. “Yesterday we were up, today we’re down. Guess what? Volatility is the new norm.”

The S&P 500 gained a combined 2 percent on Monday and Tuesday as trade tensions between the U.S. and China appeared to ease.

The flight to higher-quality assets on Wednesday sent the 10-year Treasury yield down toward 2.78 percent. Aluminum headed for its biggest winning streak since 1988.

“Another sharp two-day rally in the stock market ... followed by another tweet from the President ... followed by another reversal of the rally,” Matt Maley, an equity strategist at Miller Tabak, wrote in an email to clients . “It’s becoming a broken record. The White House can say that the blame really goes to China and Russia ... and maybe they’re correct ... but there is no doubt that the President’s comments/ tweets have been THE catalyst to stop the sharp shortterm bounces we have seen in recent weeks.”

Geopolitic­s and the Fed minutes overshadow­ed the latest reading on U.S. consumer prices. The key inflation measure accelerate­d to the highest in a year as a drag from mobile-phone costs faded, bearing out the central bank’s forecast for a pickup in prices.

“We have to keep in mind that the Fed doesn’t target this gauge of inflation, lessening its importance for what interest rates might do,” James McCann, senior global economist at Standard Life Investment­s in Boston, wrote in an email. “Inflation does seem to be building slowly and it looks like the Phillips Curve isn’t dead after all, but we need to be very careful seeing today as a signal of strong domestic inflation.”

Earlier in Asia stocks were mixed, with indexes in China and Hong Kong posting the biggest gains as People’s Bank of China offered more details on pledges to open the world’s second-largest economy.

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