US stocks rise after the Fed cuts rates and hopes build for more
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.
The S&P 500 rose 0.8% and was on track to squeak past its all-time closing high, which was set in October. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 559 points, or 1.2%, with roughly an hour remaining in trading, and the Nasdaq composite was 0.4% higher.
Fed Chair
At the moment, though, Powell said for the first time in this rate-cutting campaign that interest rates are close to where they're pushing neither inflation nor the job market higher or lower. That should give the Fed time to hold and reassess what to do next with interest rates as more data comes in on the job market and on inflation.
“We are well positioned to wait and see how the economy evolves,” Powell said. He also said no one at the Fed is expecting a hike to rates in their “base case” anytime soon.
After voting on Wednesday's cut of a quarter of a percentage point, Fed officials released projections for where they see the federal funds rate potentially ending 2026. The median member is penciling in one more cut by the end of next year, the same as three months earlier.
That projection is under the microscope because Fed officials had seemed unusually split about how much more help the economy may need from lower interest rates. With inflation remaining stubbornly above the Fed’s 2% target, some officials had been saying it was the bigger threat for the economy rather than the job market.
In Wednesday's vote, two Fed officials voted against the cut of a quarter percentage point because they saw no need to reduce rates now. Another official, meanwhile, voted against Wednesday's cut because he wanted a deeper reduction of half a percentage point.
In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year
On
On the losing end of
In stock markets abroad, indexes were mixed amid mostly modest movements across
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AP Business Writers



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