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Asian shares extend global rout, yen perks up on intervention hints

An electronic stock quotation board is displayed inside a conference hall in Tokyo, Japan November 1, 2021. REUTERS/Issei Kato

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  • https://tmsnrt.rs/2zpUAr4
  • Nikkei tumbles 2.3%, S&P 500 futures stabilise
  • Dollar falls 0.6% on yen on news of rate check from BoJ
  • 2-yr U.S. yields scale new 15-yr high of 3.8040%
  • U.S. yield curve remains deeply inverted

SYDNEY, Sept 14 (Reuters) – Asian stocks tumbled on Wednesday as U.S. data dashed hopes for an immediate peak in inflation, although the dollar paused its relentless run against the yen as Japan gave its strongest signal yet it was unhappy with the currency’s sharp declines.

Data on Tuesday showed the headline U.S. consumer price index gained 0.1% on a monthly basis versus expectations for a 0.1% decline. In particular, core inflation, stripping out volatile food and energy prices, doubled to 0.6%. read more

Wall Street saw its steepest fall in two years, the safe-haven dollar posted its biggest jump since early 2020, and two-year Treasury yields, which rise with traders’ expectations of higher Fed fund rates, jumped to the highest level in 15 years.

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The stock rout is set to hit European markets, with the pan-region Euro Stoxx 50 futures , German DAX futures and FTSE futures off more than 0.7%.

In Asia, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) fell 2.2% on Wednesday, dragged lower by a 2.4% plunge in resources-heavy Australia (.AXJO), a 2.5% drop in Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index (.HSI) and a 1.5% fall in Chinese bluechips (.CSI300).

Japan’s Nikkei (.N225) tumbled 2.6%.

After a heavy equity selloff overnight, both the S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures rose 0.2%.

“Markets have reacted violently to what I would consider to be a modest miss in U.S. CPI,” said Scott Rundell, chief investment officer at Mutual Limited.

“Futures have stabilised, so we might see a dead-cat bounce tonight.”

Financial markets now have fully priced in an interest rate hike of at least 75 basis points at the conclusion of the Fed’s policy meeting next week, with a 38% probability of a super-sized, full-percentage-point increase to the Fed funds target rate, according to CME’s FedWatch tool.

A day earlier, the probability of a 100 bps hike was zero.

“USD rates are now pricing in a Fed funds rate of 4.25% by end-2022 (75bps, 75bps, 25bps for the remaining three meetings). Decent odds of a 4.5% peak early 2023 is also reflected,” said Eugene Leow, senior rates strategist at Deutsche Bank.

“While resilient growth and slowing inflation can make for a better risk taking environment, the U.S. economy now looks too hot still. With no clear signs of the labour market slowing and inflation still problematic, a downshift from the Fed looks set to be delayed again.”

The strength of the U.S. dollar had pressured the rate sensitive Japanese yen close to its 24-year low at 149.96 yen before giving up some of the gains on news that the Bank of Japan has conducted a rate check in apparent preparation for currency intervention. read more

Yen-buying intervention is rare. The last time Japan intervened to support its currency was in 1998, when the Asian financial crisis triggered a yen sell-off and rapid capital outflows.

Earlier in the day, Japanese Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki said that currency intervention was among options the government would consider. read more

The dollar now hovered at 143.7 yen , down 0.6% for the day.

Many traders remained doubtful that intervention was imminent, but the jump in the yen pointed to rising nerves. The timing of the BOJ’s move also suggests that 145 per dollar will be an important level for markets and the authorities.

The two-year U.S. Treasury yield scaled a new 15-year high of 3.8040% on Friday before retreating to 3.7629%, and its curve gap with the benchmark 10-year yields widened to around 34 basis points, compared with just 16 basis points a week ago.

The yield curve inversion is usually treated as a warning of recession.

The 10-year Treasury note yield held steady at 3.4178%.

Oil prices edged lower on Friday. U.S. crude settled down 0.6% at $86.82 per barrel and Brent eased by a similar margin at $92.65.

Gold was slightly higher. Spot gold was traded at $1703.02 per ounce.

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Reporting by Stella Qiu; Editing by Stephen Coates, Ana Nicolaci da Costa and Sam Holmes

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Ukraine troops reach railway hub as breakthrough threatens to turn into rout

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  • Ukrainian breakthrough is fastest advance in months
  • Thousands of Russian troops face potential encirclement

KYIV/HRAKOVE, Ukraine, Sept 10 (Reuters) – Ukrainian officials shared photos on Saturday showing troops raising the nation’s flag over the main railway city that has supplied Russian forces in northeastern Ukraine, as a collapse in Russia’s frontline threatened to turn into a rout.

A Reuters journalist inside a vast area recaptured in recent days by the advancing Ukrainian forces saw Ukrainian police patrolling towns and boxes of ammunition lying in heaps at positions abandoned by fleeing Russian soldiers.

With Ukrainians now having reached the city of Kupiansk, where rail lines linking Russia to eastern Ukraine converge, the advance had penetrated all the way to Moscow’s main logistics route, potentially trapping thousands of Russian troops.

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Natalia Popova, adviser to the head of the Kharkiv regional council, shared photos on Facebook of troops holding up a Ukrainian flag in front of Kupiansk city hall. A Russian flag lay at their feet. “Kupiansk is Ukraine. Glory to the armed forces of Ukraine,” she wrote.

Ukraine’s security service confirmed Kyiv had forces inside Kupiansk.

In Hrakove, one of dozens of recaptured villages, Reuters saw burnt out vehicles bearing the “Z” symbol of Russia’s invasion, and piles of rubbish and ammunition in positions the Russians had abandoned in evident haste.

“Hello everyone, we are from Russia,” was spraypainted on a wall.

Three bodies lay in white body bags in a yard.

The regional chief of police, Volodymyr Tymoshenko, said Ukrainian police had moved in the previous day, and had checked the identities of local residents who had lived under Russian occupation since the invasion’s second day.

“The first function is to provide help that they need. The next job is to document the crimes committed by Russian invaders on the territories which they temporarily occupied.”

The capture of at least part of Kupiansk, if confirmed, potentially leaves thousands of Russian soldiers trapped at the frontline and cut off from supplies, including in Izium, Russia’s main stronghold and logistics hub in the northeast.

Reuters could not independently verify the situation in either Kupiansk or Izium. Moscow has acknowledged that its frontline has buckled in Kharkiv but has said it is rushing extra troops to reinforce the area. Russian-installed regional officials have called for civilians to evacuate both cities.

Britain’s Ministry of Defence in an intelligence update said: “A Russian force around Izium is likely increasingly isolated.

“Ukrainian units are now threatening the town of Kupiansk; its capture would be a significant blow to Russia because it sits on supply routes to the Donbas front line.”

Mark Hertling, a retired four-star general and former commander of U.S. ground forces in Europe, tweeted: “Make no mistake, (Ukraine) is executing a brilliant maneuver focused on terrain objectives to ‘bag’ Russians. But the Russians are helping them — by doing very little to counter.”

ZELENSKIY HAILS SUCCESS

In an overnight video address, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said at least 30 settlements had been liberated in Kharkiv region during the advance of recent days.

“Our army, intelligence units and the security services are carrying out active engagements in several operational areas. They are doing so successfully,” he said in a video address.

Ukrainian officials have released a barrage of images of troops sweeping into previously Russian-held towns and being embraced by local residents who had been under Russian military occupation for six months.

Oleksiy Arestovych, an adviser to Ukraine’s presidential office, in a video posted on YouTube, said the Russians in Izium were almost isolated.

Ukraine’s advance in the east is by far its most rapid success in months, after a long period in which the war had shifted into a relentless grind along entrenched front lines.

It came as a surprise just a week after Kyiv announced the start of a long-awaited counter-attack to reclaim Russian-occupied territory hundreds of kilometres away at the opposite end of the front in Kherson in the south.

Less information has been made public about that operation but Kyiv has also claimed some successes there, cutting supply routes to thousands of Russian troops isolated on the west bank of the Dnipro River.

“We see success in Kherson now, we see some success in Kharkiv and so that is very, very encouraging,” U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told a news conference in Prague on Thursday.

Tens of thousands of people have been killed, millions have been driven from their homes and Russian forces have destroyed entire cities since launching what Moscow calls a “special military operation” to “disarm” Ukraine. Russia denies intentionally targeting civilians.

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Reporting by Reuters reporters; writing by Peter Graff; editing by Jason Neely

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Dow futures sink around 200 points as Friday’s rout on Wall Street looks set to continue

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on August 26, 2022 in New York City.

Spencer Platt | Getty Images

Stock futures fell on Monday morning as investors tried to shake off a sharp decline in stocks at the end of last week.

Futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 240 points, or about 0.75%. Those for the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 dropped 0.92% and 1.3%, respectively.

The moves in futures come after a brutal sell-off for Wall Street on Friday, when Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s short and blunt remarks in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, appeared to extinguish hopes of the central bank changing its aggressive course of rate hikes in the months ahead.

The Dow fell 1,008 points, or just over 3%, for its worst day since May. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite fell 3.4% and 3.9%, respectively, for their worst days since June. The drop erased the August gains for all three averages.

“Investors again cut back on their recent Risk-On positioning, supporting our view that it is way too soon to call their recent risk appetite a more permanent stance, and now one more likely to have cost them badly,” Rick Bensignor of Bensignor Investment Strategies said in a note to clients.

The coming week brings more Fed speeches, including Vice Chair Lael Brainard on Tuesday, before August’s nonfarm payrolls report on Friday.

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Fed’s Powell sparked a 1,000-point rout in the Dow. Here’s what investors should do next.

Now might be the time to consider hiding out in short-dated Treasurys or corporate bonds and other defensive parts of the stock market.

On Friday, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell talked of a willingness to inflict “some pain” on households and businesses in an unusually blunt Jackson Hole speech that hinted at a 1970s-style inflation debacle, unless the central bank can rein in sizzling price gains running near the highest levels in four decades.

Read: Fed’s Powell says bringing down inflation will cause pain to households and businesses in Jackson Hole speech

Powell’s strident stance had strategists searching for the best possible plays that investors can make, which may include government notes, energy and financial stocks, and emerging-market assets.

The Fed chair’s willingness to essentially break parts of the U.S. economy to curb inflation “obviously benefits the front end” of the Treasury market, where rates are moving higher in conjunction with expectations for Fed rate hikes, said Daniel Tenengauzer, head of markets strategy for BNY Mellon in New York. 

To his point, the 2-year Treasury yield
TMUBMUSD02Y,
3.384%
hit its highest level since June 14 on Friday, at 3.391%, after Powell’s speech — reaching a level last seen when the S&P 500 officially entered a bear market.

Investors might consider making a play for the front end of credit markets, like commercial paper, and leveraged loans, which are floating-rate instruments — all of which take advantage of the “most clear direction in markets right now,” Tenengauzer said via phone. He’s also seeing demand for Latin American currencies and equities, considering central banks in that region are further along in their rate-hiking cycles than the Fed is and inflation is already starting to decline in countries like Brazil. 

A Fed battle cry

Powell’s speech was a moment reminiscent of Mario Draghi’s “do whatever it takes” battle cry a decade ago, when he pledged as then-president of the European Central Bank to preserve the euro during a full-blown sovereign-debt crisis in his region.

Attention now turns to next Friday’s nonfarm payroll report for August, which economists expect will show a 325,000 job gain following July’s unexpectedly red-hot 528,000 reading. Any nonfarm payrolls gain above 250,000 in August would add to the Fed’s case for further aggressive rate hikes, and even a 150,000 gain would be enough to generally keep rate hikes going, economists and investors said.

The labor market remains “out of balance” — in Powell’s words — with demand for workers outstripping supply. August’s jobs data will offer a peek into just how off kilter it still might be, which would reinforce the Fed’s No. 1 goal of bringing inflation down to 2%. Meanwhile, continued rate hikes risk tipping the U.S. economy into a recession and weakening the labor market, while narrowing the amount of time Fed officials may have to act forcefully, some say.

“It’s a really delicate balance and they’re operating in a window now because the labor market is strong and it’s pretty clear they should push as hard as they can” when it comes to higher interest rates, said Brendan Murphy, the North American head of global fixed income for Insight Investment, which manages $881 billion in assets.

“All else equal, a strong jobs market means they have to push harder, given the context of higher wages,” Murphy said via phone. “If the labor market starts to deteriorate, then the two parts of the Fed’s mandate will be at odds and it will be harder to hike aggressively if the labor market is weakening.”

Insight Investment has been underweight duration in bonds within the U.S. and other developed markets for some time, he said. The London-based firm also is taking on less interest-rate exposure, staying in yield-curve flattener trades, and selectively going overweight in European inflation markets, particularly Germany’s.

For Ben Emons, managing director of global macro strategy at Medley Global Advisors in New York, the best combination of plays that investors could take in response to Powell’s Jackson Hole speech are “to be offense in materials/energy/banks/select EM and defense in dividends/low vol stocks (think healthcare)/long the dollar.”

‘Tentative signs’

The depth of the Fed’s commitment to stand by its inflation-fighting campaign sank in on Friday: Dow industrials
DJIA,
-3.03%
sold off by 1,008.38 points for its largest decline since May, leaving it, along with the S&P 500
SPX,
-3.37%
and Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-3.94%,
nursing weekly losses. The Treasury curve inverted more deeply, to as little as minus 41.4 basis points, as the 2-year yield rose to almost 3.4% and the 10-year rate
TMUBMUSD10Y,
3.042%
was little changed at 3.03%.

For now, both the inflation and employment sides of the Fed’s dual mandate “point to tighter policy,” according to senior U.S. economist Michael Pearce of Capital Economics. However, there are “tentative signs” the U.S. labor market is beginning to weaken, such as an increase in jobless claims relative to three and four months ago, he wrote in an email to MarketWatch. Policy makers “want to see the labor market weakening to help bring wage growth down to rates more consistent with the 2% inflation target, but not so much that it generates a deep recession.”

With an unemployment rate of 3.5% as of July, one of the lowest levels since the late 1960s, Fed officials still appear to have plenty of scope to push forward with their inflation battle. Indeed, Powell said the central bank’s “overarching” goal is to bring inflation back to its 2% target and that policy makers would stand by that task until it’s done. In addition, he said they’ll use their tools “forcefully” to bring that about, and the failure to restore price stability would involve greater pain.

Front-loading hikes

The idea that it be might be “wise” for policy makers to front-load rate hikes while they still can seems to be what’s motivating Fed officials like Neel Kashkari of the Minneapolis Fed and James Bullard of the St. Louis Fed, according to Derek Tang, an economist at Monetary Policy Analytics in Washington. 

On Thursday, Bullard told CNBC that, with the labor market strong, “it seems like a good time to get to the right neighborhood for the funds rate.” Kashkari, a former dove who’s now one of the Fed’s top hawks, said two days earlier that the central bank needs to push ahead with tighter policy until inflation is clearly moving down.

Luke Tilley, the Philadelphia-based chief economist for Wilmington Trust Investment Advisors, said the next nonfarm payroll report could come in either “high or low” and that still wouldn’t be the main factor behind Fed officials’ decision on the magnitude of rate hikes.

What really matters for the Fed is whether the labor market shows signs of loosening from its current tight conditions, Tilley said via phone. “The Fed would be perfectly fine with strong job growth as long as it means less pressure on wages, and what they want is to not have such a mismatch between supply and demand. Hiring is not the big deal, it’s the fact that there are so many job openings available for people. What they really want to see is some mix of weaker labor demand, a decline in job openings, stronger labor-force participation, and less pressure on wages.”

The week ahead

Friday’s August jobs report is the data highlight of the coming week. There are no major data releases on Monday. Tuesday brings the S&P Case-Shiller home price index for June, the August consumer confidence index, July data on job openings plus quits, and a speech by New York Fed President John Williams.

On Wednesday, Loretta Mester of the Cleveland Fed and Raphael Bostic of the Atlanta Fed speak; the Chicago manufacturing purchasing managers index is also released. The next day, weekly initial jobless claims, the S&P Global U.S. manufacturing PMI, the ISM manufacturing index, and July construction spending data are released, along with more remarks by Bostic. On Friday, July factory orders and a revision to core capital equipment orders are released.

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Nasdaq closes lower as chipmaker Micron’s warning renews tech rout

  • Micron falls on lowered revenue forecast
  • Semiconductor stocks drop for third session
  • Novavax tumbles after cutting revenue view by half

NEW YORK, Aug 9 (Reuters) – The Nasdaq closed down on Tuesday after a dismal forecast from Micron Technology pulled chip makers and tech stocks lower as investors await U.S. inflation data that could lead the Federal Reserve to further tighten its efforts to curb inflation.

High inflation numbers on Wednesday, following last week’s blowout jobs report, would likely stop the Fed from easing interest rates hikes anytime soon and halt the market’s rally off mid-June lows.

Traders see a 68.5% chance of the Fed raising rates by 75 basis points in September, in what would be its third big hike in a row.

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Adding to concerns of a tight labor market and runaway inflation, data on Tuesday showed an acceleration of unit labor costs in the second quarter, which suggested strong wage pressures will help keep inflation elevated. read more

Unit labor costs – the price of labor per single unit of output – rose at a 10.8% rate, following a 12.7% rate of growth in the first quarter, the Labor Department said.

“We’re still seeing wage pressure building, using last Friday’s job data as a gauge,” said Jimmy Chang, chief investment officer at Rockefeller Global Family Office.

Chang remains cautious about the market’s outlook. “I don’t think it’s going to be a set of numbers that will change the Fed’s policy course,” he said.

Inflation at the moment is primarily supply driven, so the traditional central bank playbook of tightening rates to crimp demand will not be as effective as previous cycles, said Jean Boivin, head of the BlackRock Investment Institute.

“We’re going to see central banks being surprised by inflation. They will have to sound hawkish on the back of this,” Boivin told the Reuters Global Markets Forum.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) fell 58.13 points, or 0.18%, to 32,774.41, while the S&P 500 (.SPX) lost 17.59 points, or 0.42%, to 4,122.47 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) dropped 150.53 points, or 1.19%, to 12,493.93.

Volume on U.S. exchanges was 10.64 billion shares, compared with the 10.94 billion average for the full session over the past 20 trading days.

Seven of the 11 major S&P 500 sectors fell, led by a 1.5%decline in consumer discretionary (.SPLRCD). Value stocks (.IVX) closed flat, while the growth index (.IGX) slid 0.8%.

The jobs data from last Friday eroded some of the bullish arguments that the Fed would “pivot” to a neutral policy stance, followed by rate cuts early next year, Chang said.

“You have some strategists and technicians capitulating, saying the bottom is behind us, this is a new bull market now,” he said. “Typically in a bear market, a summer rally is not unusual.”

Micron Technology Inc (MU.O) slid 3.7% after the memory-chipmaker cut its current-quarter revenue forecast and warned of negative free cash flow in its next quarter as demand wanes for chips in PCs and smartphones. read more

YTD performance

Micron’s dismal forecast, a day after Nvidia Corp (NVDA.O) warned of weakness in its gaming business, knocked the Philadelphia Semiconductor index (.SOX) down 4.57%, its biggest single-day decline since June 16 as all 30 components fell. The index has lost 7% the past three days.

President Joe Biden signed a sweeping bill to provide $52.7 billion in subsidies for U.S. semiconductor production and research, a measure that gained bipartisan support to combat China’s investment in technology. read more

“It’s utterly discounted,” said Michael Shaoul, chief executive officer at Marketfield, on why chip stocks were unfazed by the bill.

Rate-sensitive growth and technology stocks slipped as U.S. Treasury yields climbed.

Despite a choppy recovery, the benchmark S&P 500 (.SPX) is down 13.5% this year after hitting a record high in early January as surging consumer prices, hawkish central banks and geopolitical tensions weigh.

Stronger-than-expected earnings from corporate America have been a positive, with 77.5% of S&P 500 companies beating earnings estimates, according to Refinitiv data as of Friday.

Occidental Petroleum (OXY.N) rose 4.0% after Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway (BRKa.N) increased its stake to 20.2% of outstanding shares. Occidental’s shares have more than doubled in price this year. read more

U.S. vaccine maker Novavax (NVAX.O) slumped 29.6% after it halved its annual revenue forecast as it does not expect further sales of its COVID-19 shot this year in the United States amid a global supply glut and soft demand. read more

Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a 1.91-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.41-to-1 ratio favored decliners.

The S&P 500 posted four new 52-week highs and 30 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 42 new highs and 66 new lows.

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Reporting by Herbert Lash in New York and Bansari Mayur Kamdar in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Aniruddha Ghosh in Bengaluru; Editing Arun Koyyur, Shounak Dasgupta and Lisa Shumaker

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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What’s next for the stock market after Fed rate-hike plans help spark rout

Investors will watch for another gauge of U.S. inflation in the week ahead after the stock market was rattled by the Federal Reserve ramping up its hawkish tone and suggesting large interest rate hikes are coming to get an overheating economy under control. 

“We’re probably seeing peak hawkishness right now,” said James Solloway, chief market strategist and senior portfolio manager at SEI Investments Co., in a phone interview. “It is no secret that the Fed is way behind the curve here, with inflation so high and so far only one 25 basis-point increase under their belt.”

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said April 21 during a panel discussion hosted by the International Monetary Fund in Washington that the central bank isn’t “counting on” inflation having peaked in March. “It is appropriate in my view to be moving a little more quickly,” Powell said, putting a 50 basis-point rate hike “on the table” for the Fed’s meeting early next month and leaving the door open to more outsize moves in the months ahead.

U.S. stocks closed sharply lower after his remarks and all three major benchmarks extended losses Friday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average booking its largest daily percentage drop since late October 2020. Investors are grappling with “very strong forces” in the market, according to Steven Violin, a portfolio manager at F.L.Putnam Investment Management Co.

“The tremendous economic momentum from the recovery from the pandemic is being met with a very rapid shift in monetary policy,” said Violin by phone. “Markets are struggling, as we all are, to understand how that’s going to play out. I’m not sure anyone really knows the answer.”

The central bank wants to engineer a soft landing for the U.S. economy, aiming to tighten monetary policy to fight the hottest inflation in about four decades without triggering a recession.

The Fed “is partly to blame for the current situation as its exceedingly accommodative monetary policy over the last year has left it in this very tenuous position,” wrote Osterweis Capital Management portfolio managers Eddy Vataru, John Sheehan and Daniel Oh, in a report on their second-quarter outlook for the firm’s total return fund.  

The Osterweis portfolio managers said the Fed can raise the target fed funds rate to cool the economy while shrinking its balance sheet to lift longer maturity rates and contain inflation, but “sadly, implementation of a dual-pronged quantitative tightening plan requires a level of finesse that the Fed is not known for,” they wrote.

They also raised concern over the Treasury yield curve’s brief, recent inversion, where shorter-term yields rose above longer-term yields, calling it “a rarity for this stage of a tightening cycle.” That reflects “a policy error,” in their view, which they described as “leaving rates too low for too long, and then potentially hiking too late, and probably too much.”

The Fed last month hiked its benchmark interest rate for the first time since 2018, raising it by 25 basis points from near zero. The central bank now appears to be positioning to front-load its rate hikes with potentially larger increases.

“There’s something in the idea of front-end loading,” Powell remarked during the panel discussion on April 21. James Bullard, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, said April 18 that he wouldn’t rule out a large hike of 75 basis points, though that is not his base case, The Wall Street Journal reported. 

Read: Fed funds futures traders see 94% likelihood of 75 basis point Fed hike in June, CME data shows

“It’s very likely that the Fed is going to move by 50 basis points in May,” but the stock market is having a “bit harder time digesting” the notion that half-point increases also could be coming in June and July, said Anthony Saglimbene, global market strategist at Ameriprise Financial, in a phone interview. 

The Dow
DJIA,
-2.82%
and S&P 500
SPX,
-2.77%
each tumbled by nearly 3.0% on Friday, while the Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-2.55%
dropped 2.5%, according to Dow Jones Market Data. All three major benchmarks finished the week with losses. The Dow fell for a fourth straight week, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq each saw a third consecutive week of declines.

The market is “resetting to this idea that we’re going to move to a more normal fed funds rate much quicker than what we probably” thought about a month ago, according to Saglimbene. 

“If this is peak hawkishness, and they push really hard at the offset,” said Violin, “they perhaps buy themselves more flexibility later in the year as they start to see the impact of very quickly getting back to neutral.”

A faster pace of interest rate increases by the Fed could bring the federal funds rate to a “neutral” target level of around 2.25% to 2.5% before the end of 2022, potentially sooner than investors had been estimating, according to Saglimbene. The rate, now in the range of 0.25% to 0.5%, is considered “neutral” when it is neither stimulating nor restricting economic activity, he said. 

Meanwhile, investors are worried about the Fed shrinking its roughly $9 trillion balance sheet under its quantitative tightening program, according to Violin. The central bank is aiming for a faster pace of reduction compared to its last effort at quantitative tightening, which roiled markets in 2018. The stock market plunged around Christmas that year. 

“The current anxiety is that we’re headed to that same point,” said Violin. When it comes to reducing the balance sheet, “how much is too much?”

Saglimbene said that he expects investors may largely “look past” quantitative tightening until the Fed’s monetary policy becomes restrictive and economic growth is slowing “more materially.” 

The last time the Fed tried unwinding its balance sheet, inflation wasn’t a problem, said SEI’s Solloway. Now “they’re staring at” high inflation and “they know they have to tighten things up.” 

Read: U.S. inflation rate leaps to 8.5%, CPI shows, as higher gas prices slam consumers

At this stage, a more hawkish Fed is “merited and necessary” to combat the surge in the cost of living in the U.S., said Luke Tilley, chief economist at Wilmington Trust, in a phone interview. But Tilley said he expects inflation will ease in the second half of the year, and the Fed will have to slow the pace of its rate hikes “after doing that front-loading.” 

The market may have “gotten ahead of itself in terms of expectations for Fed tightening this year,” in the view of Lauren Goodwin, economist and portfolio strategist at New York Life Investments. The combination of the Fed’s hiking and quantitative tightening program “could cause market financial conditions to tighten” before the central bank is able to increase interest rates by as much as the market expects in 2022, she said by phone. 

Investors next week will be watching closely for March inflation data, as measured by the personal-consumption-expenditures price index. Solloway expects the PCE inflation data, which the U.S. government is scheduled to release April 29, will show a rise in the cost of living, partly because “energy and food prices are rising sharply.” 

Next week’s economic calendar also includes data on U.S. home prices, new home sales, consumer sentiment and consumer spending. 

Ameriprise’s Saglimbene said he’ll be keeping an eye on quarterly corporate earnings reports next week from “consumer-facing” and megacap technology companies. “They’re going to be ultra-important,” he said, citing Apple Inc.
AAPL,
-2.78%,
Meta Platforms Inc.
FB,
-2.11%,
PepsiCo Inc.
PEP,
-1.54%,
Coca-Cola Co.
KO,
-1.45%,
Microsoft Corp.
MSFT,
-2.41%,
General Motors Co.
GM,
-2.14%
and Google parent Alphabet Inc.
GOOGL,
-4.15%
as examples.

Read: Investors just pulled a massive $17.5 billion out of global equities. They’re just getting started, says Bank of America.

Meanwhile, F.L.Putnam’s Violin said that he is “pretty comfortable staying fully invested in equity markets.” He cited low risk of recession but said he prefers companies with cash flows “here and now” as opposed to more growth-oriented businesses with earnings expected far out in the future. Violin also said he likes companies poised to benefit from higher commodity prices.

“We’ve entered a more volatile time,” cautioned SEI’s Solloway. “We really need to be a little bit more circumspect in how much risk we should be taking on.”

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Kansas vs. Miami score, takeaways: Jayhawks rout Hurricanes, head to Final Four as only remaining No. 1 seed

There won’t be a Final Four without a No. 1 seed this year. No. 1 Kansas used a strong second-half to erase a halftime deficit and ultimately put away No. 10 Miami 76-50 in the Midwest Regional final.

The Jayhawks (32-6) are headed to their fourth Final Four under coach Bill Self, and their first since 2018. The opponent in 2022 is the same as it was then, with Kansas taking on Villanova at 6:09 p.m. Saturday in New Orleans.

Kansas has struggled in the Elite Eight under Self, going 3-5 before Sunday’s win. And with Kameron McGusty scoring 14 first-half points, it looked like another rough regional final outing was in store for the Jayhawks. Kansas led 27-26 before Miami (26-10) ended the half on a 9-2 run to take a 35-29 halftime advantage.

Kansas didn’t waste much time erasing that edge in the second half. Christian Braun’s 3-pointer — Kansas’ first of the game — with 15:27 remaining broke a 40-all tie, and about five minutes later, Ochai Agbaji’s own 3-pointer pushed the lead into double digits at 12. Miami never cut that lead back to single digits again.

Five Jayhawks scored at least nine points, led by Agbaji, who broke out of his recent slump with 18 points on 8-of-12 shooting, and he added five rebounds, four assists and four steals.

McGusty finished with 18 points to lead the Hurricanes.

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Stocks Gain With U.S. Futures as Bond Rout Deepens: Markets Wrap

(Bloomberg) — Stocks in Europe climbed along with U.S. equity futures on Monday as negotiators from Russia and Ukraine prepare for a new round of talks. A global bond rout deepened, with the five-year Treasury yield cresting 2% for the first time since 2019.

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The Stoxx Europe 600 index jumped more than 1%, with carmakers leading the advance following a “confident” outlook from Volkswagen AG. Basic-resources and energy stocks fell as crude oil declined along with natural gas. Tech investor Prosus NV slumped more than 10% after a continued selloff in Chinese technology shares amid regulatory headwinds and concerns about Beijing’s relationship with Russia. Contracts on the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 nudged higher, signaling some calm may return to U.S. markets after last week’s volatile trading.

The 10-year Treasury yield climbed to its highest level since July 2019 and yields across the euro region also jumped. The Federal Reserve on Wednesday is expected to begin a cycle of rate increases to curb inflation, starting with a 25 basis-points move. Price pressures were already high before the conflict and the isolation of resource-rich Russia upended commodity flows.

Investors are parsing efforts at diplomacy as Russia continues its war in Ukraine, as well as comments from a U.S. official that Moscow asked China for military assistance. The flattening U.S. Treasury yield curve, and a 12% drop in global stocks this year, signal worries that receding stimulus and higher costs for energy, grains and metals may throttle the world economic recovery.

“We are experiencing extraordinary volatility in global equities compounded by wavering market sentiment, and the risk of recession intensifies on spiraling commodity prices,” Louise Dudley, portfolio manager for global equities at Federated Hermes, wrote in a note. “We expect ongoing swings in the short term as geopolitical uncertainty over Russian crude persists.”

The 9% plunge in a gauge of Chinese tech firms reverberated around the region, leaving an Asia-Pacific equity index in the red for a second session. A Covid lockdown in Shenzhen, a tech hub, added to the geopolitical and regulatory risks facing the sector.

Crude dropped while remaining above $105 a barrel. The dollar edged lower and gold retreated. The ruble was steady versus the greenback in Moscow trading, with Russia’s stock market still closed. Investors are waiting to see if Russia defaults on its international debt after losing access to almost half of its foreign-exchange reserves.

‘Stuck’ Fed

The Fed is the drawcard among eight Group-of-20 members whose monetary officials are due this week to assess economic prospects.

The Fed is “really stuck between the real economy and the financial economy,” Karen Harris, Bain & Co. global head of macro research, said on Bloomberg Television. “You have mainstream struggling with inflation — that’s why we are set to see these rises coming in March. On the other side we are trying not to prick the financial economy. Either path is deflationary, recessionary.”

While the U.S. and some other nations are tightening monetary settings, speculation is growing that China will introduce more easing to alleviate a slowdown. The yuan and China’s 10-year government bond yield retreated.

Meanwhile, senior U.S. and China officials are set to meet Monday to discuss Ukraine. Russian missiles hit a military training facility in western Ukraine close to Poland, raising new concerns about the conflict potentially spilling over Ukraine’s borders.

Here are some key events to watch this week:

  • China one-year medium-term lending facility rate, economic activity data, Tuesday

  • EIA crude oil inventory report, Wednesday

  • FOMC rate decision and Fed Chair Jerome Powell news conference, Wednesday

  • Bank of England rate decision, Thursday

  • ECB President Christine Lagarde, Executive Board member Isabel Schnabel, Governing Council member Ignazio Visco and Chief Economist Philip Lane speak at a conference, Thursday

  • Bank of Japan rate decision, Friday

For more markets news, follow our Markets Live blog.

Some of the main moves in markets:

Stocks

  • The Stoxx Europe 600 rose 1.2% as of 9:37 a.m. London time

  • Futures on the S&P 500 rose 0.6%

  • Futures on the Nasdaq 100 rose 0.3%

  • Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.8%

  • The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell 1.4%

  • The MSCI Emerging Markets Index fell 2.2%

Currencies

  • The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed

  • The euro rose 0.4% to $1.0960

  • The Japanese yen fell 0.5% to 117.84 per dollar

  • The offshore yuan fell 0.3% to 6.3758 per dollar

  • The British pound rose 0.1% to $1.3051

Bonds

  • The yield on 10-year Treasuries advanced nine basis points to 2.08%

  • Germany’s 10-year yield advanced nine basis points to 0.33%

  • Britain’s 10-year yield advanced nine basis points to 1.58%

Commodities

  • Brent crude fell 3.2% to $109.12 a barrel

  • Spot gold fell 1.3% to $1,962.76 an ounce

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

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Paige Bueckers returns from 19-game absence, scores 8 points in UConn’s rout over St. John’s

After being sidelined for nearly three months with a left knee injury, reigning national player of the year Paige Bueckers made her much anticipated return in the UConn Huskies’ 93-38 win over St. John’s Friday evening in Hartford, Connecticut.

The sophomore All-American guard took the floor for the first time since Dec. 5 when she checked in at the 3:41 mark of the first quarter to a standing ovation from the XL Center crowd.

Bueckers had missed the previous 19 games for the No. 7 Huskies (21-5) after suffering an anterior tibial plateau fracture and lateral meniscus tear in the final minute of UConn’s 73-54 win over Notre Dame on Dec. 5. She underwent surgery to repair the injury on Dec. 13.

Bueckers came off the bench Friday for the first time in her career, and her first basket since December was a memorable one. With the clock winding down at the end of the first quarter, Bueckers shook her defender and nearly lost the ball before collecting it and sinking an elbow jumper right at the buzzer. Bueckers roared and raised her hands to amp up the student section whom she’d scored in front of before being embraced by her teammates on the bench.

The star guard finished with eight points on 4-for-5 shooting in 12 minutes, with three stints of action before she sat the entire fourth quarter. She played within herself, but looked more and more comfortable creating her own shot and running in transition as the game went on.

“We tried to get her 15 minutes,” coach Geno Auriemma said in a courtside interview with SNY after the game. “I think we got close to that. We’ll see how she feels tomorrow. And hopefully we can do the same thing and maybe a little bit more on Sunday.”

UConn has one more regular-season game, Sunday versus Providence, before the Big East tournament.

Bueckers averaged a team-best 21.2 points, 6.2 assists, 5.5 rebounds and 2.7 steals in the six games she played this season prior to injury. The Huskies started the year 5-1 with her in the lineup, losing to top-ranked South Carolina in the Bahamas Nov. 22, and went 15-4 without her.

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Silva leads Manchester City’s charge towards last eight in rout of Sporting | Champions League

This Manchester City demolition of Sporting was akin to a heavyweight bullying a featherweight. A fair question was to wonder how these opponents shared the same pitch, so dominant were England’s champions.

At the break Pep Guardiola’s men were four goals up, by the final whistle it was 5-0, and at the close of the tie they may go close to Bayern Munich’s 12-1 evisceration of Sporting at the same stage in 2008-09.

That was the Portuguese club’s only previous last-16 experience and this lack of knowhow was written all over how City toyed with them and landed killer blows at will. A prime factor is, of course, the riches the side fuelled by Abu Dhabi’s petro‑dollars enjoy: that should allow them to beat a significantly lower‑budget operation such as Sporting but so immaculately are they drilled by their manager, who might stop the City juggernaut finally claiming the Champions League this term is a puzzle.

At kick-off the Estádio José Alvalade glittered from phone torches that lit up the Lisbon night and what followed was a perfect City start. Aymeric Laporte found the excellent Bernardo Silva and when Phil Foden’s shot was subsequently saved, Kevin De Bruyne passed to Riyad Mahrez and the Algerian scored. City seemed to think De Bruyne was offside but VAR ruled Gonçalo Inácio played the Belgian on, and thus Mahrez had a 10th goal in his past 11 Champions League appearances.

Sporting and their support were stunned. The Portuguese champions’ last outing, a 2-2 draw with Porto on Friday, ended in a mass brawl and three of their men sent off. In Rúben Amorim they have a 37-year-old manager who cost the club €10m to prise from Braga and whose repayment was a cup-and-championship double, the latter a first title in 19 years.

Amorim now, somehow, had to rally his men but instead City struck again. This time a Mahrez corner was weakly cleared and Silva pounced, rifling a superb half-volley past Antonio Adán for a 2-0 lead 17 minutes in.

Guardiola’s XI featured four old boys of Sporting’s crosstown rivals Benfica – João Cancelo, Rúben Dias, Silva and Ederson were booed initially whenever they took a touch, the home support switched focus to their own team. For a while, Sporting showed in flashes. A Ricardo Esgaio raid along the left had City back-pedalling. Then, Pablo Sarabia looked to do the same but the No 17 ran infield and John Stones, who ended the threat. In-between, Pedro Gonçalves, the scorer of four goals in the group stage, let fly twice.

Riyad Mahrez (left) scores Manchester City’s opening goal against Sporting. Photograph: Michael Zemanek/Shutterstock

Guardiola, on the prowl in the technical area, was conscious of Sporting’s threat – a volley he gave Dias for not passing diagonally indicative of his concern. The Catalan was about to applaud his team, though. At first Dias, Rodri, and Stones played keep-ball in their half. But, suddenly, De Bruyne was marauding towards goal, feeding Mahrez who pirouetted and crossed for Foden to finish – Sebastián Coates, the nearest defender, making it too simple for the forward.

Three-nil up so soon pointed to the serious mismatch occurring. City were illustrating precisely why they are the competition favourites and Sporting were showing how Ajax put five past them here in September. The rest of the period had City in a quasi-exhibition mode. Passes were interchanged, positions shifted, differing zones occupied. And, then, a fourth was secured: this time Silva’s strike was from close range, Raheem Sterling teeing him up.

City’s travelling contingent ended the first half regaling their team. The second half, now, seemed a matter of how many more they might register.

Sporting fans, to their credit, kept singing and would do so until the end.

The way Cancelo, De Bruyne and Rodri harried their men showed City were targeting the jugular still. On the touchline, Guardiola next threw up his hands in dismay at an errant Dias chip forward, then had a prolonged chat with the fourth official, his gestures suggesting unhappiness with the refereeing of Srdjan Jovanovic.

More pleasing for the 51-year-old was how a rare Sporting attack was broken up and City, in their slick fashion, moved upfield via Rodri, De Bruyne and Cancelo. And, even better was the team’s fifth finish. Here, Sterling was ruthless, the No 7’s long-range effort sailing into the top corner and moving him to 10th on the club’s all-time list of scorers.

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This had entered embarrassing territory for Sporting. Portugal’s domestic champions were being made to appear a part-time outfit. There were no more goals – but only because City were content with their night’s work.

Guardiola found fault with the “loss of balls” as he is a perfectionist. But, he did also call it, correctly, the “dream result”. Silva, the clear man-of-the-match, said: “It was nice to start the last 16 with a 5-0 win. There is still a job to do in Manchester. We cannot relax.” They most certainly can.

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