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Wall Street closes higher as inflation data supports Fed bets

Published 01/12/2022, 07:20 AM
Updated 01/12/2022, 06:25 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A trader watches his chart while working on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange July 8, 2014. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

By Bansari Mayur Kamdar, Shreyashi Sanyal and Sinéad Carew

(Reuters) - U.S. stock indexes rose on Wednesday after data showed that while U.S. inflation was at its highest in decades, it largely met economists' expectations, cooling some fears that the Federal Reserve would have to pull back support even more forcibly than already expected.

Ten out of the 11 major S&P sectors finished higher after the news with the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq outperforming the Dow as growth stocks outperformed value.

Data from the Labor Department showed the consumer price index (CPI) increased 0.5% last month after rising 0.8% in November, while in the 12 months through December, the CPI surged 7.0% to its highest year-on-year rise in nearly four decades.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast a CPI gain of 0.4% for December and 7.0% on a year-on-year basis.

"Investors were bracing for even hotter in inflation than what we actually saw. As bad as the number is and as much inflationary pressure that's in the economy there was a little relief in that," said Anthony Saglimbene, Ameriprise Financial (NYSE:AMP)'s global market strategist in Troy, Michigan.

"Today's inflation report validates the Fed trajectory and means they don't have to be any more aggressive than is already priced in."

The central bank's plan for easing accommodation to fight inflation includes raising interest rates, which analysts expect to start as soon as March, as well as tapering its bond buying program and reducing its asset holdings.

For most stock sectors it also helped that longer-dated U.S. Treasury yields dipped on Wednesday. In recent weeks, sharp gains in the U.S. 10-year yield had weighed on stocks, particularly in rate-sensitive growth sectors like technology.

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"The fact that bond market yields are standing down is probably a signal for equity investors to take on a little more risk today," said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Cresset Capital Management in Chicago.

But with the small cap Russell 2000 index underperforming to end down 0.82%, Ablin saw some caution.

"Equity investors still want quality. It's not a free-for-all," Ablin said.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 38.3 points, or 0.11%, to 36,290.32, the S&P 500 gained 13.28 points, or 0.28%, to 4,726.35 and the Nasdaq Composite added 34.94 points, or 0.23%, to 15,188.39.

The S&P's top sector gainers of the day were materials, up almost 1%, consumer discretionary, up 0.6% and technology which rose 0.4%.

Growth and technology stocks have been staging a comeback this week, with investors watching a variety of metrics to decide whether to buy the rally or brace for more declines.

Also on the watchlist for this week is the unofficial kick-off of the fourth quarter earnings season with JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM), Citigroup Inc (NYSE:C) and Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) due to report their results on Friday.

The Dow's biggest drag for the day was Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS), which fell 3% and Morgan Stanley fell 2.7% on the day as their smaller rival Jefferies fell 9% after it missed quarterly earnings expectations.

Both Goldman and Morgan Stanley, like Jefferies depend heavily on their capital markets business. Both Morgan Stanley and Goldman were also in the top five biggest drags on the S&P 500 on the day. However, the broader banking sector, which includes more traditional lenders, rose 0.3% on Wednesday.

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In sectors like air travel, however, surging cases of the Omicron variant of the coronavirus could dampen earnings expectations, with analysts at Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) reckoning that the pandemic's impact on corporate travel is the biggest risk to the airline industry.

The healthcare index, was weighed down by shares of drugmaker Eli Lilly (NYSE:LLY), which closed down 2.4% and was the biggest single weight on the S&P, and Biogen (NASDAQ:BIIB), which lost 6.7%.

The U.S. government Medicare program said that while it plans to cover Biogen's Aduhelm Alzheimer treatment it will require patients to be enrolled in a clinical trial, limiting access to the medication. This could also impact Eli Lilly, which is developing similar drugs.

The biggest boosts to the S&P on the day were Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) up 3.9% ahead of Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) Google parent Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL), which both rose more than 1%.

Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a 1.26-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.37-to-1 ratio favored decliners.

The S&P 500 posted 38 new 52-week highs and 1 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 60 new highs and 137 new lows.

On U.S. exchanges 10.251 billion shares changed hands compared with the 10.496 billion average for the last 20 sessions.

Latest comments

the fed put and the fed bets, welcome to the fed casino!
You don't call this closes higher - this is inch up - lol Closes Higher means like at least a hundred points up, but when  you are struggling to maintain that border line of safety, you call that - inch up -. lol
🇹🇩
I believe this is the craziest moment in the US Stock Market history and the country in general terms.It is just hard to maintain composure reading or listening to finantial news and institutions. This time they are playing with fire, they are playing with citizens welfare whose incomes are shrinking as inflation advance mercilessly. A serious central bank would have never allowed inflation to run this high to the detriment of main street and openly favoring the rich. Your time have come Mr. Powel to do what is correct. Act n behalf of your country for God sake.
inflation data supports fed bet are u joking?
inflation is way under reported anyway. I work in food and we buy direct from manufacturers and generally speaking our costs went up 15% last year, at least. add min wage effectively going up 10 to 15%, rents went up 10%, energy up a ton etc etc. how they come to 7%... I mean, what exactly dropped in price to cancel out any of the gains?
Inflation supports Fed bets? HAHAHAHA ....Is this the same fed who was saying in 2020 that inflation would be falling by the start of Q3 2021? So the fed is betting on inflation at 40 years highs?????? Lets ignore the fact inflation would have been about 0.4% higher if oil/gas prices hadn't fallen at the end of Nov due to Covid concerns (Now already back at $85 a barrel - so good luck with January's inflation numbers). The market is a bubble all built on Fed printing press cash (you know the stuff Powell hopes you ignore as he only wants to blame supply bottlenecks - ignore the $7 - $8 Trillion he has printed in the past 18 months as that emmm that would have no impact at all??)
Interest rates can't rise either: " In short, the Fed has no tools to add drag without a catastrophic reduction in output. And so inflation is a freight train hurling down an endless abyss with no brakes. " I don't see why investors can't see this...The FED can't fix it!
Stan - the stock market is not for the FED to say anything, it's for the elite rich to say & decide how to fix the markets. it's been like this all these years since AG's time till now. Try to digest and get use to it. Invest with caution. Cheers
the title is not only ridiculous but is even able to be offensive to 99.8% people that not only is losing but that will pay for the silly FED purchases and massive new debt!
And 2PM sharp, the "buyers" come out of the woodwork.  The desire to keep the fraud covert is completely gone.  Pure, flagrant manipulation in broad daylight, as Wall Street averages up holdings in retirement plans, and laughs in the face of America.
Fear eases? Inflation is at a 40 years high...
It's simply laughable... 7% eases fear LOL
yeah this makes no sense. its like saying if someone was guilty of manslaughter instead of homicide.
The CORRECTION is coming
Not so sure. The AI running the show sure squashed Monday's selloff.
Michael - yes, soon, probably happening this first quarter 2022 Mid February the slide will start, just my thoughts
I honestly thought there would have already been a correction by the end of last year. BUT the issue is Fed has pumped $4 Trillion extra into the money supply. So much money needing a home and all sloshing around forming bubble after bubble. More or less impossible to have any correction as any dip is bought within days regardless of the news/risk/reward. Plus with interest rates still at 0 and bond yields so low.... The bubble 100% will burst - but I think more look at Q2 or Q3 2023 once the money supply is lower (unless another unforeseen major event occurs)
Once they run out of fingers to plug this dike, we'll be looking for higher ground.
Just when you think this laughable "market" can't get more criminal, it surprises once again.
blablabla inflation is transistory once production is back upto speed we get a huge deflation
lol, no. Once companies know they can charge this amount they never go down in price. Greed wins every time. Only exception is gas prices because they are set differently and competition is fierce.
 only if people will be still willing to pay for 0,1pct the richest
no worries cpi highest in 40 years heheheheheh house of cards
and it's not like prices will get cheaper, they will just stop rising as fast. Average Joe doesn't realize this. Once companies know people buy at the higher price that is locked in.
7% is nothing as i think the ultimate goal is to break all time high which is 24%.. at least biden can has his name written in history book.
What I love is the fact a % of the reason inflation wasn't above expectations is due to the fall in oil and gas prices since the end of Nov - due to worries about the impact on Omnicron. Oil prices dipped but are now back around the $85 mark - so if anything Jan inflation is going to be even higher and we haven't seen the peak yet.
Man seriously this makes no sense, just gonna blame it on bad journalism... lolol they just writing whatever and hope it makes sense
.....inflation data calms nerves ? Title readers will buy TESLA and AMAZON .... but I know Energy and Banks are will be winners this year
Raging inflation "calms nerves" because some rigged "estimate" was met.  And the flagrant propping of the market continues.  Can't have a loss in the biggest investment JOKE in the world.
Main St. suffering is "in-line" stocks up
Inflation is more like 20%
I would agree with that... my rent lease was increased by a whooping 40% and people are just saying ok
Only in the USA could 7% inflation be seen as a good thing for the stock market as it's what analysts predicted (the same analysts who largely predicted in 2020 that inflation would be falling at this stage...). A market flooded with debt cash floating around with no one knowing what to do with it all  since the fed has kept bond rates artificially low. Plus a Fed still trying to claim inflation is nothing got to do with their $7 TRILLION in debt printing + keeping interest rates at 0% for 2 years (US Corp debt hasn't been this high vs GDP in 40+ years). May not happen for another 12/18 months as so much cash in the market - but this bubble will implode eventually (it always does).
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