Global Stocks, Wall Street Futures Mixed After US Inflation Cools
BEIJING (AP) -- Global stock markets and Wall Street futures were mixed Wednesday after a cooler reading on U.S. inflation buoyed hopes the Federal Reserve will postpone a possible interest rate hike.
London and Frankfurt opened higher. Shanghai and Hong Kong declined while Tokyo advanced. Oil prices rose.
Wall Street's benchmark S&P 500 index hit a 14-month high after official data Tuesday showed U.S. consumer inflation eased to 4% over a year earlier in May from the previous month's 4.9%. It was less than half last June's peak of 9.1% but still double the Fed's 2% target.
That reinforced hopes the Fed will avoid announcing another rate hike when its monthly meeting ends Wednesday. Two Fed board members have said the U.S. central bank should put off a hike while it studies the impact of previous increases.
"The Fed will see this as a window of opportunity to pause," Clifford Bennett of ACY Securities said in a report.
In early trading, the FTSE 100 in London rose 0.1% to 7,602.64. The CAC 40 in Paris gained 0.2% to 7,323.55 and the DAX in Frankfurt advanced 0.2% to 16,272.07.
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On Wall Street, the S&P 500 future was up 0.2%. That for the Dow Jones Industrial Average was off 0.1%.
On Tuesday, the S&P 500 rose 0.7%. The Dow gained 0.4% and the Nasdaq composite rallied 0.8%.
In Asia, the Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.1% to 3,228.98 while the Nikkei 225 in Tokyo rose 1.5% to 33,502.42. The Hang Seng in Hong Kong lost less than 0.6% to 19,408.42.
The Kospi in South Korea was off 0.7% at 2,619.08 and Sydney's S&P-ASX 200 gained 0.3% to 7,161.70.
India's Sensex added 0.2% to 63,244.17. New Zealand declined while Singapore and Bangkok advanced.
Traders hope the U.S. economy can avoid a recession even after the Fed raised its benchmark lending rate to a 16-year high to extinguish surging inflation by cooling business activity.
Tuesday's inflation reading prompted traders to increase bets for the Fed to announce no change to interest rates. That would be the first monthly meeting in more than a year without a rate hike.
Previous rate hikes led to a contraction in manufacturing and three high-profile bank failures.
Nvidia gained 3.9% on Tuesday and was the strongest force pushing up the S&P 500, along with other technology stocks. Tech and other high-growth stocks are seen as some of the biggest beneficiaries if the Fed eases off rate hikes.
Nvidia has gotten an added boost from Wall Street's enthusiasm for artificial intelligence.
On Tuesday, four out of five stocks in the S&P 500 rose.
Raw-material producers and industrial companies had some of the biggest gains amid hopes for a resilient economy. Miner Freeport-McMoRan rose 5.3%.
Many traders expect the Fed to resume raising rates in July even if it holds steady this week.
Zions Bancorp. fell 1.6% after it appeared to cut its forecast for upcoming net interest income in an investor presentation.
Many investors came into this year predicting a recession would hit in the third quarter, which is two weeks away. Yet a resilient job market has propped up economic activity.
In energy markets, benchmark U.S. crude rose 42 cents to $69.84 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose $2.30 on Tuesday to $69.42. Brent crude, the price basis for international oil trading, added 57 cents to $74.86 per barrel in London. It gained $2.45 the previous session to $74.29.
The dollar declined to 139.90 yen from Tuesday's 140.29 yen. The euro gained to $1.0796 from $1.0790.