Wall Street Shares Mixed After Fed Minutes; U.S. Treasury Yields Near Highs
Wall Street Shares Mixed After Fed Minutes; U.S. Treasury Yields Near Highs
Wall Street shares reversed earlier losses in choppy trading on Wednesday and U.S. Treasury yields hovered near highs for the year after data suggested the U.S. job market and consumer spending continued to improve.

WASHINGTON/LONDON:Wall Street shares reversed earlier losses in choppy trading on Wednesday and U.S. Treasury yields hovered near highs for the year after data suggested the U.S. job market and consumer spending continued to improve.

Oil prices were largely steady as investors questioned the effectiveness of a U.S.-led release of oil from strategic reserves. [O/R]

European shares ended a four-day losing streak with shares of Telecom Italia leading gains, although fears around Europe’s worsening COVID-19 situation and the prospect of severe restrictions restrained the market. [.EU]

The S&P 500 gained 1.73 points, or 0.04%, to 4,692.43, and the Nasdaq Composite added 20.12 points, or 0.13%, to 15,795.26, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 70.23 points, or 0.2%, to 35,743.57 by 2:07 p.m. EST (1907 GMT).

Trading was choppy after the release of minutes of the Federal Reserve’s latest meeting, held Nov. 2-3, showed that various policymakers would be open to speeding up the elimination of the U.S. central bank’s bond-buying program and move more quickly to raise interest rates if high inflation held.

Data showed U.S. weekly jobless claims fell to a 52-year low and third-quarter GDP growth was revised higher, while other readings showed a solid rise in consumer spending in October while consumers paid much higher prices for goods through the third quarter, as inflation continued to grow.

“This could have been a relatively uneventful week as a result of tomorrow’s U.S. bank holiday, … but instead, it’s been quite the opposite, as Powell’s renomination sent shockwaves through the markets,” said Craig Erlam of OANDA in a market note.

U.S. President Joe Biden on Monday nominated Jerome Powell for a second term as Fed chair, and named Fed Governor Lael Brainard, the other top candidate for the job, as vice chair.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index climbed 0.1% after recording its worst session in nearly two months on Tuesday as earlier momentum took a hit from gloomy German business sentiment. MSCI’s gauge of stocks across the globe pared losses to trade down 0.28%.

Germany’s Ifo index of business sentiment in November was 96.5, compared with a Reuters consensus forecast of 96.6, helping to send the DAX Germany blue chip index down 0.6%.

November was the fifth month running of falling German business morale, blamed on supply bottlenecks in manufacturing and a spike in coronavirus infections, raising the prospect that Europe’s biggest economy could stagnate in the fourth quarter.

“It was slightly below what the market has been forecasting, which is not surprising considering the high corona numbers and the low percentage of vaccinated people,” said Rene Albrecht, a rates analyst at DZ Bank.

Emerging markets stocks fell 0.35%.

CRUDE GOES FLAT

In commodities, Brent oil futures were down 0.18% at $82.16 in choppy trading, and U.S. crude futures were down 0.22% at $78.35.

Gold prices slipped as the robust U.S. economic data lifted the dollar, leaving bullion set for a fifth straight down session. The greenback’s strength makes bullion more expensive to holders of other currencies. Spot gold dropped 0.34%.[GOL/]

The U.S. dollar continued its upward trend on renewed bets the Fed will hike rates to tame inflation. The dollar index rose 0.4% and touched a 16-month high.

Treasuries benchmark 10-year notes last rose to yield 1.6531%, while prices of 2-year notes last fell to yield 0.6457%. [US/]

The Turkish lira remained under pressure, falling 5.75% , compounding its historic nosedive on Tuesday as President Tayyip Erdogan defended recent rate cuts even as inflation soars and vowed to win his “economic war of independence.”

The euro was last down 0.51%. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.3%.

(Additional reporting by Abhinav Ramnarayan, Alun John, Hideyuki Sano; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Mark Potter and Leslie Adler)

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