Yield-sensitive tech stocks such as Apple Inc, Facebook Inc,
Netflix Inc, Amazon.com Inc and Microsoft Corp dropped between
0.8% and 1.7% in premarket trading.
The Dow on Wednesday surpassed 33,000 points for the first time
after the Fed projected strongest growth in nearly 40 years as
the COVID-19 crisis winds down, and repeated its pledge to keep
its target interest rate near zero for years to come.
While inflation is expected to exceed the Fed's 2.0% target to
2.4% this year, Fed Chair Jerome Powell views it as a temporary
surge that will not change the central bank's stance.
A $1.9 trillion spending stimulus sparked fears of rising
inflation that triggered a jump in longer end Treasuries that
led a rotation into value stocks at the cost of high-growth tech
stocks.
Big U.S. banks, that are sensitive to economic outlook,
including JPMorgan Chase & Co, Bank of America Corp, Citigroup
Inc and Goldman Sachs were among the top gainers in early
premarket trade.
At 06:26 a.m. ET, Dow E-minis were up 46 points, or 0.14%, S&P
500 E-minis were down 15.75 points, or 0.4%, and Nasdaq 100
E-minis were down 142.75 points, or 1.08%.
(Reporting by Shashank Nayar in Bengaluru; Editing by Shounak
Dasgupta)
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