US stocks turned higher on Thursday while Treasuries rallied, after data showed US inflation continued to slide in December, easing pressure on the Federal Reserve to continue with sharp interest rate rises.
Wall Street’s blue-chip S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite both pared early losses to trade 0.3 per cent and 0.2 per cent higher in New York respectively, added to the gains notched in the previous session.
The moves came after a report from the Department of Labor that showed annual consumer price growth in the US fell to 6.5 per cent in December, down from 7.1 per cent in November and broadly in line with economists’ expectations. The closely watched “core” measure of inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, clocked in at a rate of 5.7 per cent in December, down from 6 per cent the previous month.
The latest figures raise the chances of the Fed lifting its main policy rate by 0.25 percentage points when central bankers meet at the end of January, following on from a half a percentage point rise in the final month of 2022. Debate is now likely to focus on when this year a “Fed pivot” on rates might come.
Although Fed officials insist interest rates are unlikely to fall until 2024, expectations of an “easing cycle in the second half of the year, China reopening and lower energy prices” were all encouraging investors back into risky assets, said Chris Turner, global head of markets at ING.
The S&P 500 on Wednesday registered its first back-to-back daily gains in three weeks, while the Nasdaq Composite notched its first four-day winning streak in four months. An inflation number “in line with consensus probably allows the risk rally to continue”, Turner said.
Rates markets were pricing in a roughly 75 per cent chance that the Fed lifts rates by 0.25 percentage points to a target range of 4.5 per cent to 4.75 per cent when it meets at the end of January, but assigned a roughly 91 per cent probability that the bank goes ahead with such a move following the release of December’s inflation figures.
Markets also moderately dialled back where they expect the central bank’s main policy rate to peak later this year, with investors anticipating that borrowing costs will crest at about 4.9 per cent in June.
US government bonds rallied across the board on the day, with the yield on the two-year Treasury note, which is particularly sensitive to interest rates, falling 0.08 percentage points to 4.15 per cent. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell 0.03 percentage points to 3.52 per cent. Bond yields move inversely to prices.
A measure of the dollar’s strength against a basket of six other currencies fell 0.4 per cent on Thursday, having declined more than 8 per cent over the past three months, partly on the back of cooling core inflation data.
Elsewhere in equity markets, Europe’s Stoxx 600 added 0.7 per cent and Germany’s Dax rose 0.8 per cent on Thursday, while London’s FTSE 100 gained 0.7 per cent, inching closer to an all-time high. In Asia, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 0.3 per cent and China’s CSI 300 of Shanghai- and Shenzhen-listed stocks added 0.2 per cent.
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