Stock market today: Wall Street wavers following congressional testimony from Powell
Stock indexes on
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq composite each rose 0.1%, enough to bump up the indexes to all-time highs for the second time this week.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 0.1% after spending much of the day drifting between small gains and losses.
In his testimony Tuesday before the
Powell’s testimony offered little new guidance on the Fed’s plans for when it might lower interest rates. Traders are still betting that there’s a 70% chance that the central bank will cut its main interest rate as soon as September, according to data from CME Group.
“The market is really seeing no surprises today and so that’s allowing it to modestly drift higher,” said
While prices have eased sharply over the last two years as the Fed raised interest rates, the central bank's goal is to cool inflation back to its target of 2% without slowing economic growth too much.
Most measures of inflation show that it is easing, though at a much slower pace throughout 2024. The rate is hovering around 3% and continues exerting pressure on consumers, especially those with lower incomes.
In his testimony Tuesday, Powell noted that “elevated inflation is not the only risk we face.” Cutting rates “too late or too little could unduly weaken economic activity and employment,” he said.
A strong jobs market and consumer spending have been supporting economic growth, though the pace has slowed. Consumer spending has also been weakening as inflation prompts shifts in priorities for many to necessities over discretionary items. Borrowing costs are also higher because of elevated interest rates, adding more pressure on consumers.
“If the Fed can’t start cutting rates in the next couple months, the economy would be at risk of weakening even further in the short term and that would also push back when we’d expect the economy to re-accelerate,” said
Gains in banks helped outweigh a pullback in industrials, energy and other sectors in the S&P 500 index Tuesday.
Chipmaker Intel rose another 1.8% following Monday’s 6.2% gain as bullish analysts suggest the company’s next processors will be in high demand for AI-related products.
Consumer goods company Helen of Troy, which makes Osprey and OXO products, sank 27.7% after posting first-quarter results that fell far short of forecasts.
Stocks have been gaining ground steadily over the last several months and that has helped push the S&P 500 to 36 records so far this year.
All told, the S&P 500 rose 4.13 points to 5,576.98. The Nasdaq added 25.55 points to close at 18,429.29. The Dow fell 52.82 points to 39,291.97.
Powell is scheduled to testify on Wednesday before the
Traders are also looking ahead to several earnings reports this week.
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AP Economics Writer
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