Stockmarket

Stocks rise as slowdown inflation continues in November; Fed meeting kicks off



© Reuters

Investing.com — U.S. stocks rose Tuesday, as data showing an ongoing slowdown in inflation kept hopes for an early rate cut next year alive just as the Federal Reserve kicked off its two-day meeting.

By 14:58 ET (19:58 GMT), the 30-stock had gained by 142 points or 0.4%, the benchmark gained 0.3%, and tech-heavy gained 0.5%. The main averages on Wall Street all posted their highest closing levels so far this year in the prior session.

Inflation continues to cool, pushing Treasury yields lower

Annual headline consumer price growth edged down to 3.1% last month, decelerating from 3.2% in October, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics on Tuesday. Month-on-month, the reading inched up by 0.1%. Economists had forecast the measures at 3.1% and 0.0%, respectively.

The closely-watched “core” figure, which strips out volatile items like food and energy, rose by 4.0% annually, in line with the prior month. On a monthly basis, underlying price gains came in at 0.3%, a marginally faster pace than 0.2% in October. Both matched estimates.

Following the data, bets on rate cut in the first half of the year remained supported, with about 50% of traders betting on cut in May, according to Investing.com’s Fed Rate Monitor Tool.

Treasury yields fell, with the yield on the 10-year Treasury down 2 basis points to 4.31%.

Oracle falls as cloud revenue falls short; Hasbro slips on job cut plans

Oracle Corporation (NYSE:) fell more than 12% after the cloud company reported quarterly revenue that fell short of Wall Street estimates amid sluggish cloud growth.

Hasbro Inc (NASDAQ:) fell more than 1% after the toymaker said it would cut about 20% of its workforce amid ongoing pressure from dwindling toy sales.

Fed kicks off two-day meeting

The Fed kicked off its two-day meeting Tuesday that is expected to culminate in decision to keep rates unchanged. The Fed’s projections, or so-called dot plots, will likely garner the bulk of investor attention amid expectations for the Fed to increase the number of cuts next year.

But “with markets pricing about 100–125bps of cuts by end the of next year, I wouldn’t expect anything other than for the Committee to disappoint,” Scotiabank said in a recent note.

Epic Games wins Google antitrust lawsuit

A federal jury has found against Google in a high-profile antitrust lawsuit brought by “Fortnite”-maker Epic Games, sending shares in the tech giant’s parent Alphabet (NASDAQ:) lower.

Epic had argued that the tech giant essentially used its Play app store as an illegal monopoly that unfairly charged high fees on developers and suppressed competition in the Android app market. According to a court filing, the jury ruled in favor of Epic on all counts.

The court will begin to decide what changes Google will need to put in place in January. In a statement quoted by Reuters, Google said it will appeal the ruling.

Energy stocks dragged lower by slump in oil

Energy stocks fell more than 1% after tumbled on Tuesday, as worries over excess supply offset the impact of an attack on a commercial chemical tanker by Iran-aligned Houthis.

Occidental Petroleum Corporation (NYSE:), Marathon Oil Corporation (NYSE:), and Devon Energy Corporation (NYSE:) were among the biggest decliners in the sector.

(Scott Kanowsky contributed to this report.)

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