
- Moving the markets
The markets went on a roller coaster ride today, ignoring the warnings of Fed Chair Powell and other central bankers who said they would raise interest rates to fight inflation, even if it hurts economic growth.
The European markets took the hint and fell sharply, but the US traders shrugged it off and pushed the major indexes higher. The Dow led the way, while the Nasdaq lagged. Some of the optimism came from the news that all US banks passed the Fed’s annual stress test. But I wonder how they would fare in a real crisis.
The housing market showed more signs of weakness, as pending home sales dropped more than expected in May. But the economy surprised everyone with a strong Q1 GDP growth of 2%, almost double the initial estimate. The catch is that most of it came from a sudden surge in exports, which sounds fishy to me.
The markets cheered this number, but they forgot that it makes rate hikes more likely. In fact, the odds of higher rates jumped today, along with the Economic Surprise Index and bond yields. The 10-year yield soared to 3.85%, while the 2-year reached near cycle highs. The dollar also gained strength, hitting near 4-week highs.
All this hawkishness hurt gold, which gave up its earlier gains but managed to stay above $1,900. The AI boom chart is still on track.
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