- US
stocks rose modestly Tuesday after Wall Street's key indexes snapped win streaks in the previous session. - St. Louis Fed President James Bullard reiterated its call for the fed funds rate to top 3% this year.
Stocks rose modestly Tuesday, winning back some ground lost in the previous session after US
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Goldman Sachs said Tuesday it now expects the Fed to raise interest rates by 50 basis points at both the May and June meetings.
Here's where US indexes stood at 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday:
- S&P 500: 4,476.67, up 0.35%
- Dow Jones Industrial Average: 34,725.97, up 0.5% (172.98 points)
- Nasdaq Composite: 13,860.72, up 0.18%
St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard in a Bloomberg interview on Tuesday reiterated his call for the federal funds rate to be jacked up above 3% this year as lower rates put upward pressure on inflation. Consumer price inflation hit a fresh 40-year high of 7.9% in February.
Market bets suggested investors expect a half-point rate increase could take place at the Fed's meeting in May. With investors pricing in more rate hikes, a selloff in the bond market continued and pushed the 10-year Treasury yield to a 2019 high of 2.359%. The 10-year yield later pared its gain, rising five basis points to 2.343%.
Alibaba stock soared after the Chinese e-commerce heavyweight announced its biggest-ever share buyback program of $25 billion.
JPMorgan's quant guru Marko Kolanovic slightly tempered his bullishness on stocks Monday, lowering his S&P 500 year-end price target to 4,900 from 5,050 in the face of geopolitical and macro risks.
Oil prices slipped. West Texas Intermediate crude shed 0.2% to $111.92 per barrel. Brent crude, the international benchmark, slipped 0.2% to $115.36.
Gold prices edged down 0.1% to $1,927.10 per ounce. Bitcoin gained 4.2% to $42,928.34