S&P 500 Snaps Two-Day Climb With Fed in Focus: Markets Wrap

In This Article:

(Bloomberg) -- The S&P 500 fell on Wednesday — after wavering for most of the session — as investors pondered the Federal Reserve’s path of rate cuts and digested housing-market data.

Most Read from Bloomberg

The Nasdaq 100 closed modestly higher. The 10-year US Treasury yield advanced to hover around 3.79%. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose after a 0.5% drop on Tuesday.

Traders are now turning to earnings from Micron Technology Inc. and Jefferies Financial Group Inc., which posted results after the close. Micron shares jumped more than 10% in postmarket trading after the largest US maker of computer memory chips gave a strong revenue prediction for the current period, aided by demand for AI gear. Shares of Nvidia Corp. also climbed after the closing bell.

Investors parsed fresh data on Wednesday for clues on the economy and housing market. Sales of new homes in the US fell last month while a separate set of data showed that mortgage rates have dropped for eight consecutive weeks, spurring demand for purchasing a home.

“One of the things we’re watching is buyers catching up to the idea that mortgage rates are lower and that the break we’ve recently gotten in mortgage rates might be a lot of what we are expecting to get,” Skylar Olsen, chief economist at Zillow, said on Bloomberg Television. “Mortgage rates are not expected to go too much lower from here because they moved early with that anticipation.”

Post-Rate-Cut Catalysts

Traders are still seeking fresh catalysts after last week’s half-point rate cut by the Fed and as growth concerns linger. After China’s latest stimulus failed to ripple beyond Asian markets, investors are looking to a speech by Fed Chair Jerome Powell and price data at the end of the week.

“The market has been overestimating Fed easing for the last three years and I think probably continues to do so,” said Michael Rosen, chief investment officer at Angeles Investments. “But what’s changed a bit with the 50 basis point move was a willingness by the Fed to move faster, to be more accommodative, to be more receptive to economic conditions, as opposed to just focusing on inflation.”

On Wednesday, Fed Governor Adriana Kugler said she “strongly supported” the central bank’s decision last week, adding it will be appropriate to make additional rate cuts if inflation continues to ease as expected.