Stock market news live updates: S&P, Dow close slightly lower following Fed decision

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Stocks ended mixed on Wednesday following the Federal Reserve's latest monetary policy decision, in which the central bank affirmed market expectations that it was nearing the start of interest rate hikes as the economic recovery progressed and inflation remained hot. However, the Fed offered little in the way of concrete details about the timing and speed of its balance sheet reduction process.

The S&P 500 ended slightly lower, pulling back after rising by more than 2% at session highs. The Dow also ended lower. The Nasdaq cut gains after rising by more than 3% at the day's highs and ended just slightly in the green.

Investors on Wednesday closely eyed the Fed's monetary policy statement, which suggested officials were prepared to soon begin raising interest rates from current near-zero levels given the current economic backdrop.

“With inflation well above 2% and a strong labor market, the Committee expects it will soon be appropriate to raise the target range for the federal funds rate,” the Federal Open Market Committee said in its updated statement. The FOMC also said it plans to continue tapering its asset purchases and ultimately end this process in early March, thereby fully ending the quantitative easing program that had helped support financial markets over the course of the pandemic.

Leading up to Wednesday's statement, investors had been pricing in a more hawkish central bank as the Fed looked to rein in inflation currently running at a four-decade high. Over the past more than month, the Fed had signaled through its December meeting minutes and in public remarks that it was likely to begin raising interest rates from current near-zero levels in March. It also suggested it was considering beginning to roll assets off its balance sheet after amassing some $9 trillion in its bond portfolio.

"At this meeting, Fed officials also agreed to a short set of principles for reducing the size of the balance sheet, reaffirming that interest rates remain the main policy tool and that the FOMC wants to hold primarily Treasury securities in the longer run," Michael Pearce, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics, wrote in a note Wednesday afternoon. "Officials noted that they will commence that process 'after the process of increasing the target range… has begun' which could mean as soon as March."

"We suspect a decision could still be a few meetings away, especially given that the statement did not include any mention of caps or how quickly it will allow assets to run off its balance sheet," he added.