Fed
Chair Jerome Powell said on Friday that the U.S. economy would
need tight monetary policy "for some time" before inflation is
under control, knocking Wall Street's main indexes down more
than 3%.
Powell's blunt and hawkish remarks quashed hopes that the U.S.
central bank will resort to modest rate hikes after recent data
suggested that inflation was peaking.
Money market traders are pricing in a 68.5% chance of a third
straight 75-basis-point interest rate hike in September and
expect the Fed funds rate to end the year above 3.7%.
The benchmark S&P 500 index has climbed 11.6% since mid-June but
is still in a bear market after plummeting early this year. Some
investors fear a tough September due to seasonal weakness and
the economic pain from interest rate hikes.
Heavyweight technology and growth stocks such as Apple Inc,
Amazon.com and Tesla Inc were down between 1.5% and 2.6% in
premarket trading, hit by rising U.S. Treasury yields. [US/]
The U.S. two-year Treasury yield, which is particularly
sensitive to interest rate expectations, scaled a 15-year high,
while the closely watched yield curve measured by the gap
between two and 10-year yields remained strongly inverted. [US/]
An inversion is seen by many as a reliable signal of an
impending recession.
The CBOE's volatility index, Wall Street's fear gauge, hit a
seven-week high of 27.46 points.
At 06:25 a.m. ET, Dow e-minis were down 255 points, or 0.79%,
S&P 500 e-minis were down 35.5 points, or 0.87%, and Nasdaq 100
e-minis were down 133.75 points, or 1.06%.
Focus this week will be on the August non-farm payrolls data on
Friday, as a cooldown in the job market could ease pressure on
the Fed to raise rates aggressively.
(Reporting by Devik Jain in Bengaluru; Editing by Aditya Soni)
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