The Federal Reserve, the US central bank, is expected to raise interest rates by 75 basis points, but have markets already priced it in?
US tech stocks popped on Wednesday, lifted by upbeat quarterly earnings from Microsoft and Google-parent Alphabet ahead of the Federal Reserve’s decision to announce another increase in borrowing costs.
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, who economists predict will raise interest rates by 75 basis points, has made it clear that the US central bank is ready to do whatever it takes to fight inflation. He is also expected to signal what the future path of interest rate hikes will look like.
US inflation jumped 9.1 percent in June, the largest gain since 1981.
Fed policymakers have a tight rope to walk as they struggle to strike a balance between cooling consumer prices and not slowing economic growth. Fears over a recession are growing among some economists and analysts.
“The Fed’s on pace to hike by 75 basis points today, which will continue to increase the cost of capital for an already slowing economy,” Peter Essele, head of portfolio management at Commonwealth Financial Network, a Massachusetts-based firm, told Al Jazeera.
Megacap growth stocks have been hammered this year. The S&P 500, a vital indicator of Wall Street’s confidence, entered a bear market in 2022, having suffered its worst first six months since 1970. Cryptocurrencies have plummeted, with the world’s largest digital coin, Bitcoin, losing more than 55 percent this year.
The pandemic-era housing boom is cooling fast. US pending home sales fell in June by the most since April 2020, according to data released Wednesday.
“Early signs of a cooling effect are most evident in the housing market, a sector that’s been severely impacted by rising mortgage costs,” Essele added.
American shoppers’ sentiment has also taken a major hit in recent months. The Consumer Confidence Index fell for a third month straight to 95.7 from a downwardly revised 98.4 reading in June – the lowest reading since February 2021.
Walmart issued a profit warning on Tuesday, sending its stock down nearly 9 percent and spreading fear that the industry bellwether’s downgrade may be a prediction of what’s to come for the wider retail sector.