US stocks dip as Fed minutes show continued hawkish resolve while CPI report awaits

us-stocks-dip-as-fed-minutes-show-continued-hawkish-resolve-while-cpi-report-awaits

US stocks dipped Wednesday after Fed minutes reiterated the central bank’s goal of taming inflation.  The S&P 500 notched its sixth consecutive loss. Investors also await September consumer inflation data due out Thursday morning.  Loading Something is loading.

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US stocks closed lower Wednesday, with fresh Federal Reserve meeting minutes reiterating the central bank’s resolve in dampening inflation. 

The S&P 500 notched its sixth consecutive loss as the Fed minutes revealed that central bankers saw inflation “showing little sign so far of abating,” prompting them to raise their guidance on the path of the federal funds rate.

“Participants judged that the Committee needed to move to, and then maintain, a more restrictive policy stance in order to meet the Committee’s legislative mandate to promote maximum employment and price stability,” the minutes said.

Wholesale price data released before the market open showed a bigger monthly uptick than expected. But investors are more keenly awaiting the full inflation picture with September’s consumer price index report due out Thursday morning. The reading will be a key driver for the Federal Reserve’s next move and determine how high the central bank will move benchmark rates if inflation continues to run at a scorching clip. 

Here’s where US indexes stood shortly after the 4:30 p.m. closing bell on Wednesday: 

 S&P 500: 3,577.03, down 0.33%Dow Jones Industrial Average: 29,210.85, down 0.10% (28.34 points)Nasdaq Composite: 10,417.10, down 0.9% Here’s what else is happening today:

Barry Sternlicht said the central bank is causing residual damage with excessive monetary tightening and acted too late on inflation. Ark Invest’s Disruptive Innovation ETF could fall further from new lows hit on Tuesday, DataTrek Research said. China’s oil demand is falling and is among the factors that led OPEC to lower its forecast for 2022. In commodities, bonds, and crypto:

Oil fell, with West Texas Intermediate crude declining 2.20% to $87.40 per barrel. International benchmark Brent crude slipped 1.74% to $92.64. Gold ticked up 0.56% to $1,674.78 an ounce.  The 10-year Treasury yield fell 3.3 basis points to 3.908%. Bitcoin fell 0.09% to $19,129.12.  


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