Wall Street higher Fed chief expects inflation to stay high

By Damian Troise and Alex Veiga July 15, 2021 â€" 5.22am

Stocks wobbled in afternoon trading on Wall Street as investors weighed the latest corporate earning reports and the Federal Reserve’s chair’s comments on inflation.

Investors had a mixed reaction to a new batch of earnings news from banks, airlines and other companies, as well as the latest report showing another rise in inflation. The major indexes have been swaying between gains and losses throughout the day.

Wall Street is on track for gains on Wednesday.

Wall Street is on track for gains on Wednesday. Credit:NYSE

Wall Street is closely watching the latest round of earnings for confirmation about the scale and pace of the economic recovery as people return to work, travel again and generally try to get back to some semblance of normal following the worst of the virus pandemic.

The S&P 500 is up 0.3 per cent in late trade, on pace to reverse most of its pullback from a day earlier. The Dow Jones has added 0.2 per cent while the Nasdaq is 0.1 per cent higher. Small-company stocks continued to lag the rest of the market. The Russell 2000 index is 1.3 per cent lower.

The Australian sharemarket is poised for a flat start to Thursday’s session.

Energy companies had some of the biggest losses, partly due to a 2.9 per cent drop in the price of benchmark US crude oil. Occidental Petroleum fell 6 per cent for the biggest drop in the S&P 500, while Cabot Oil & Gas slid 3.4 per cent.

Technology stocks were higher, led by a 2.6 per cent gain in Apple following a published report that the consumer electronics giant planned to increase production of iPhones.

Long-term bond yields were mostly lower. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 1.36 per cent from 1.41 per cent late Tuesday.

Banks were mostly lower even after several of them turned in solid earnings reports.

Citigroup gave up an early gain and fell 1.1 per cent, despite reporting a more than five-fold rise in profits, helped by an improving economy that resulted in fewer bad loans on the bank’s balance sheet. Wells Fargo rose 3.5 per cent for the biggest gain in the S&P 500 after reporting its most profitable quarter in two years.

Mixed results from Bank of America disappointed investors. It fell 3.6 per cent after reporting solid profits, but weak revenue.

Airlines showed more signs of recovery as people begin to resume travel for work and leisure. American Airlines jumped 3.3 per cent after giving investors an encouraging update on its second-quarter financial picture.

Outside of earnings, investors are still closely watching measures of inflation to better gauge how it could impact the recovery. Inflation at the wholesale level jumped 1 per cent in June, pushing price gains over the past 12 months up by a record 7.3 per cent. The news on wholesale prices followed a report Tuesday that consumer prices increased in June by 0.9 per cent and were up 5.4 per cent over the past 12 months, the biggest 12-month gain in 13 years.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell suggested in testimony to a House committee that inflation will likely remain elevated, but eventually moderate, reinforcing the central bank’s position that rising inflation is a temporary impact from the recovering economy. A key concern for investors has been how quickly the Fed will shift its interest rate policies in the face of rising inflation, but it has signalled there is no imminent change coming.

AP

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