Stock market news live updates: Stocks nudge higher as rate decision from Fed looms – Yahoo Finance

Date:

- Advertisement -

U.S. stocks sank Wednesday afternoon after the Federal Reserve delivered its seventh and final interest rate increase of 2022.
The central bank lifted its key policy rate by half a percentage point, slowing the pace of hikes from 0.75% across the prior four meetings. The move brings its federal funds rate to a new range of 4.25% to 4.5%, the highest level since December 2007.
All three major averages reversed earlier gains following the decision. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) slid 0.7% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) fell 160 points. The technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) tumbled 1%.
Investors will assess remarks from Fed Chair Jerome Powell at 2:30 p.m. ET.
Fresh economic forecasts from the Fed that accompanied the decision show officials now see benchmark interest rates peaking at 5.1% in 2023, 50 basis points higher than the previously projected 4.6% in September. Officials then see rates coming down to 4.1% in 2024, slightly higher than previously projected.
Wednesday's statement also said the central bank anticipates “ongoing increases” in interest rates, implying the Fed does not intend to pause rate hikes imminently.
The decision follows Wednesday’s closely watched November Consumer Price Index (CPI), which rose at an annual 7.1% clip last month, the second consecutive downside surprise in inflation data. Stocks closed higher following the report, but Wall Street’s reaction was underwhelming, with uncertainty still ahead around how much further rates need to go to quell prices that remain persistently high.
While a downshift in inflation was welcome on Wednesday, equity markets pared much of the gains that came immediately following the print as traders thought, “what now?,” BMO Wealth Management’s Chief Investment Strategist Yung-Yu Ma said in an emailed note.
“The Fed is still going to focus on the labor market imbalance, a dovish pivot is still a long way off, and in the meantime, companies and consumers have to recalibrate to the impact of higher interest rates and a slowing economy,” Ma added. “It’s all a balancing act, which we believe points to near-term choppy markets even though the improving inflation backdrop adds a positive bias.”
That view was echoed by other Wall Street strategists, including Bank of America Chief U.S. Economist Michael Gapen, who indicated that although November’s consumer price report reflected a faster retracement in core goods inflation than expected, services inflation remains sticky.
“It may bring up discussions of another downshift in February,” Gapen said in a note penned along with his team at BofA. “We still think they go by 50 basis points given the tightness in the labor market and elevated wage growth, but the debate should be livelier especially if we get another soft December inflation report.”
Among specific movers in trading Wednesday, Sofi (SOFI) shares jumped more than 8% after a regulatory filing showed Chief Executive Officer Anthony Noto recently purchased $5 million worth of company shares.
Shares of Charter Communications (CHTR) tumbled nearly 14% following a wave of downgrades that came after the telecom giant announced plans during its investor day to spend big in coming years on a high-speed internet upgrade — starting with $10.7 billion in 2023, more than analysts expected.
Tesla (TSLA) continued a downshift after falling more than 4% in the previous session despite gains across the broader indexes following lighter CPI data. Declines in Tesla on Wednesday came following a price cut from Goldman Sachs and continued selling pressure over concerns around CEO Elon Musk's management of Twitter.
Tesla's stock is down more than 18% this month and 50% year-to-date. Since closure of Musk's deal to acquire Twitter Oct. 27, the stock has cratered roughly 28%.
This week marks what is perhaps the last week of major U.S. economic events of the year for investors, with the government’s retail sales report also on the docket for Thursday. Even as a jam-packed economic calendar keeps traders busy domestically, traders will watch moves by central banks overseas, with policymakers from the U.K. Bank of England, Mexico, Norway, the Philippines, Switzerland, and Taiwan, all set to carry out their own rate decisions on Thursday.
The U.K. received its own inflation reading Tuesday: A rapid rise in consumer prices decelerated slightly to 10.7% from a year earlier in November, down from a 41-year high of 11.1% during the prior month. U.K. equities retreated as investors awaited the U.S. Federal Reserve's messaging later today and the Bank of England's rate decision Thursday. The pound traded near its highest level since June.
Back on this side of the Atlantic, all eyes were also on the latest developments in cryptoworld, with former CEO of fallen cryptocurrency exchange FTX Sam Bankman-Fried facing a wave of criminal charges for his handling of customer and investor assets.
On the corporate front, earnings from companies including Lennar (LEN), Trip.com (TCOM), and Weber (WEBR) are scheduled for release on Wednesday.

Alexandra Semenova is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter @alexandraandnyc
Click here for the latest trending stock tickers of the Yahoo Finance platform
Click here for the latest stock market news and in-depth analysis, including events that move stocks
Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance
Download the Yahoo Finance app for Apple or Android
Follow Yahoo Finance on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Flipboard, LinkedIn, and YouTube
Related Quotes
The SEC announced fraud charges on Wednesday against seven self-proclaimed “FinTwit” financial gurus.
Goldman Sachs cut its price target on Tesla stock to $235 from $305, but maintains its Buy rating as it still sees positive long-term prospects.
The Federal Reserve raised interest rates by 0.50% on Wednesday, capping a year that saw the central bank lift rates by 4.25%.
(Bloomberg) — Chair Jerome Powell said the Federal Reserve is not close to ending its anti-inflation campaign of interest-rate increases as officials signaled borrowing costs will head higher than investors expect next year.Most Read from BloombergApple to Allow Outside App Stores in Overhaul Spurred by EU LawsIn 60 Seconds Before CPI Hit, Heavy Trading Drove Mystery RallyMusk Loses World’s Richest Title to Arnault With Tesla UnwindingWho Is Bernard Arnault, the World’s Richest Person?Is Putin
The FOMC interest-rate decision is expected to ripple through the economy, driving up rates for credit cards, HELOCs, mortgages and other loans.
Tesla's shares are down about 17% so far this month, but the stock remains the top pick for retail investors.
Is this the ultimate safe haven?
U.S. stock benchmarks turned lower after the Federal Reserve’s final interest-rate decision of the year.
The Fed's closely-tracked 'dot plot' projections see rate hikes peaking at 5.1% in the spring, and staying there until the end of 2023.
Wendy Cutler, vice president of the Asia Society Policy Institute, joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss U.S. trade policies, the TPP trade pact, and boosting U.S. competitiveness with Asia.
The Fed's closely-tracked 'dot plot' projections see rate hikes peaking at 5.1% in the spring, and staying there until the end of 2023.
The Dow was down 130 points in choppy trade Wednesday after the Federal Reserve fired off a 50 basis point rate increase and signaled that rates could eclipse 5% next year.
Executives, experts, and influencers join the Yahoo Finance team to discuss what's moving the world of finance.
While the temperature has been dropping in many parts of the country, shares of Plug Power (NASDAQ: PLUG) are heating up this week. As of 10:10 a.m. ET, shares of Plug Power are up 6.4%. Setting a price target of $26, Manav Gupta, an analyst at UBS, initiated coverage on Plug Power and assigned a buy rating on the stock, according to The Fly.
Steady telecom stocks don't often make moves as big as these, but Charter's investor day presentation left investors worried about its high spending.
QuantumScape (NYSE: QS) stock plunged this morning, dropping 10.3% around 9:52 a.m. ET to its all-time lows. The analyst's price target points at about 29% downside from the stock's closing price Tuesday, but it should pinch investors hard given that QuantumScape stock has already lost almost 70% of its value in 2022. Goldman Sachs analyst Mark Delaney downgraded QuantumScape stock's rating from neutral to sell and slashed its price target to $5 a share from $8 per share.
Shares of the online car-selling platform Carvana (NYSE: CVNA) were rising this morning after a Citi analyst initiated coverage of the stock yesterday. The analyst believes that demand for online car shopping will continue to grow and that Carvana could benefit as it does. As a result, Carvana's shares were up by 9.9% as of 10:50 a.m. ET.
The sell-off is done and it’s time to buy in again. No, unfortunately that’s not a prognosis for the stock market in general, but rather CNBC’s Jim Cramer’s recommendation for investors looking at the oil sector. “The charts, as interpreted by Carley Garner, suggest that the oil speculators have been mostly wiped out,” said the Mad Money host on Tuesday, “so it’s time to buy the dips because she wouldn’t be surprised at all if crude can rally another $20 from here.” According to Cramer, Garner's
Yahoo Finance Live’s Julie Hyman breaks down how stocks are moving ahead of the upcoming FOMC meeting.
The collapse of crypto firm FTX and former CEO Sam Bankman-Fried's arrest has left many wondering where the money went.

source

- Advertisement -

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Subscribe

ADVERTISEMENT

Popular

More like this
Related

IMF predicts global public debt will be at 93% of GDP by end of 2024

Global public debt will exceed US$100 trillion by the...

World Bank’s Banga says more bilateral debt forgiveness needed

World Bank President Ajay Banga said on Thursday (17...

Ghana, creditor panel agree on debt restructuring, paving way for IMF cash

Ghana has finalised a pact with its official creditor...

Nigeria strikes deal with Shell to supply $3.8 billion methanol project

Nigeria has struck a deal for Shell (SHEL.L), opens new...