(Bloomberg) — US stocks churned as traders poured through the latest batch of earnings reports while trying to gauge the impact of President Donald Trump’s tariff offensive and invectives directed at the head of the central bank.
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The S&P 500 eked out a small gain in choppy trading, with a slump in health insurers weighing on the equities benchmark after UnitedHealth Group Inc. cut its earnings outlook for the year. Shares of Alphabet Inc. fell after a federal judge found Google was illegally monopolizing some online advertising technology markets. The Nasdaq 100 wavered between gains and losses while the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled 1.3%.
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In the bond market, yields on Treasuries climbed after a $25 billion auction of five-year Treasury inflation-protected securities.
Trump said the termination of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell from his position can’t come quickly enough, arguing that the US central bank should have lowered interest rates already this year, and in any case should do so now.
To Krishna Guha at Evercore ISI the independence of the Fed will be a sticking point in the days ahead as tariffs bleed through to inflation expectations.
“Continued confidence in the Fed amid a loss of confidence in the administration has shaped the market response to date: real rates / real term premia higher, dollar lower, less US exceptionalism in equity markets – but well-behaved inflation expectations and no stagflation panic,” the former executive at the New York Fed wrote in a note to clients.
Applications for US unemployment benefits fell to the lowest level in two months, signaling a stable labor market. Meanwhile, the Philadelphia Fed Index tumbled, trailing all economists estimates, a warning shot from the manufacturing sector. A gauge of the dollar was little changed.
Following the turmoil triggered by the announcement of broad US levies earlier this month, investors are focusing more on developments in country-specific trade negotiations. Key questions surround China, after Beijing indicated Wednesday it has several conditions for agreeing to talks with the Trump administration.
The ECB lowered interest rates for the seventh time since last June as global trade tensions threaten to derail the region’s economic recovery. The deposit rate was decreased by a quarter-point to 2.25%, as predicted by almost all analysts polled by Bloomberg. European stocks weakened.
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