Stocks steady, bond yields cling to highs ahead of Fed testimony
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[January 11, 2022] By
Karin Strohecker and Sujata Rao
LONDON (Reuters) - Global stocks edged up
and bond yields clung to recent highs on Tuesday as investors awaited
U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's appearance before the Senate
Banking Committee, hoping for clues to the timing of expected policy
tightening.
Powell, who is seeking a second four-year term as head of the Fed,
appears before the committee on Tuesday followed by a hearing with vice
chair nominee Lael Brainard on Thursday.
Equity markets had a bruising start to the year as bets that the Fed
could raise interest rates as soon as March spurred investors to pare
risky assets and lifted the 10-year Treasury yield to a two-year high.
The MSCI All Country stock index nudged 0.2% up to 742.93 points on
Tuesday. In Europe, the STOXX index jumped 1%, snapping a three-day
losing streak to enjoy its best day in nearly three weeks.
"The flight path is still for growth to remain above trend, with healthy
businesses and households and capex policies," said Grace Peters, head
of investment strategy for Europe, Middle East and Africa at JPMorgan
Private Bank.
"A lot of this money is just starting to come into the system now so we
don't think the hawkish mood at central banks and the move up in bond
yields derails the economic expansion or leads to any prolonged downturn
in equities," she added.
The Nikkei index fell 0.9% as trading resumed after a holiday on Monday.
Australian stocks shed 0.8%, Taiwan added 0.3% and Seoul was steady.
Hong Kong ticked 0.1% higher and China's 300 index shed 0.8%.
However, S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures pointed to a flat start for U.S.
stocks.
U.S. December consumer inflation data will be released on Wednesday,
with the headline CPI seen coming in at a red-hot 7% on a year-on-year
basis, boosting the case for rates to rise sooner rather than later.
Inflation pressures prompted the Fed in December to flag plans to
tighten policy faster than expected, possibly even hiking rates in
March, though that was before it became clear just how fast the Omicron
variant would spread.
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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York City, U.S., January 10, 2022. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Fed chief Powell pledged "to prevent higher inflation from becoming entrenched"
in comments prepared for his Tuesday's congressional hearing.
He did not mention the central bank's plans to hike rates explicitly and this
week's hearings are the first opportunity for Powell and Brainard to shed more
light on their views.
"We continue to believe liftoff in March is increasingly likely. How these
debates are settled will likely have implications for post-liftoff rate hikes,"
Nomura's economists said in a report, referring to U.S. monetary policy.
"In particular, we believe comments regarding earlier runoff and less aggressive
rate hikes support our view that the Fed will slow the pace of rate hikes to two
per year in 2023."
Euro zone government bond yields hovered near recent peaks while ten-year U.S.
Treasury yields rose to an almost two-year high above 1.8% overnight, before
retreating to 1.74%, providing only muted support for the greenback.
The dollar index, which measures the currency against six counterparts, hovered
around 95.86.
The euro hit a seven-week high versus the Swiss franc, following a rise in Swiss
National Bank sight deposits last week - a possible sign that the central bank
is intervening to limit the franc's strength. [FRX/]
Bitcoin was back up around $42,200 after having dropped below $40,000 on Monday
for the first time since September.
Oil prices gained after two days of losses with Brent crude futures up 0.8% at
$81.66 a barrel following a 1% drop in the previous session. [O/R]
(Reporting by Karin Strohecker and Sujata Rao in London, and Anshuman Daga in
Singapore; Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe and Edmund Blair)
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