Stocks rise as traders make last moves before inflation report - Los Angeles Times
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Stocks rise as traders make last moves before inflation report

A sign reading "NYSE" at the New York Stock Exchange.
Investors are awaiting a highly anticipated inflation update and several big corporate earnings reports later in the week.
(Frank Franklin II / Associated Press)
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U.S. stocks rallied Wednesday as investors locked in their final moves ahead of a highly anticipated report on inflation, one that could show whether Wall Street’s rising optimism recently has been warranted or overdone.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index climbed 1.3% for its second straight gain before Thursday morning’s inflation data. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.8%, while the Nasdaq composite gained 1.8%.

Stocks have started 2023 with gains on hopes that cooling inflation and a slowing economy may get the Federal Reserve to ease off its sharp interest rate increases. Such increases can help stamp out high inflation, but they also slow the economy by design and raise the risk of a recession while hurting prices for stocks and other investments.

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Economists expect Thursday’s report to show inflation is continuing to cool from its summertime peak, down to 6.5% last month from 7.1% in November and from more than 9% in June. The hope on Wall Street is that such a trend toward normal inflation levels could persuade the Fed to soon halt its blistering set of rate increases.

Some investors are even betting the Fed will cut interest rates in the second half of this year to help prop up an economy that’s beginning to show pockets of weakness because of rate hikes. Rate cuts typically help prices for stocks and other investments.

Inflation was much more variable from 1900 to the war years. That raises the possibility that the latest burst of prices may prove as ephemeral as back then.

“One real thing I think underpinning the market is simply the fact that the market doesn’t believe the Fed when they say they’re going to keep hiking this year,†said Brad McMillan, chief investment officer for Commonwealth Financial Network.

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Of course, that also means investors could be setting themselves up for disappointment. If Thursday’s data and other reports don’t show inflation is improving as much as expected, it could mean the Fed would get tougher on interest rates.

The Fed has already said repeatedly that it plans to raise its key overnight interest rate further, past its current range of 4.25% to 4.50%. That rate began last year at its record low of virtually zero.

The central bank has also insisted it plans to keep rates high for a while to ensure inflation is really beaten down. It does not envision any rate cuts this year, and it’s even said that any “unwarranted†rallies on Wall Street “driven by a misperception†would only make the mission of returning inflation to normal more complicated.

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Recently, though, Wall Street has been looking through such pronouncements.

California has paid out $8.4 billion of the $9.5 billion set aside for the Middle Class Tax Refund program, according to the Franchise Tax Board.

Treasury yields have been easing off their recent highs, in part on expectations for a less aggressive Fed.

The yield on the two-year Treasury, which tends to track expectations for Fed action, dipped to 4.22% from 4.24% late Tuesday. The 10-year Treasury yield, which helps set rates for mortgages and other important loans, fell to 3.53% from 3.61%.

If the economy does fall into a modest recession, possible rate cuts could offer some support for stocks. And hope is growing among investors that the economy could successfully walk the tightrope of slowing enough to snuff out high inflation but not so much as to cause a deep recession.

That’s helped spark a mini-rebound for some of the stocks that fell the most last year, in large part because of rising rates.

Facebook’s parent, Meta Platforms, is up 10.4% so far in 2023 after slumping 64.2% in 2022, for example.

Later this week, companies will also begin reporting results from the last three months of 2022. That’s key because earnings are one of the main levers that set stock prices, and the reports will offer a window into how companies are managing the squeeze of inflation.

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Bank of America, Delta Air Lines, JPMorgan Chase and UnitedHealth are among those reporting results Friday. Analysts say this could mark the first time since 2020 that earnings per share across S&P 500 companies dropped from year-ago levels.

The S&P 500 gained 50.36 points to 3,969.61 Wednesday. The Dow rose 268.91 points to 33,973.01, and the Nasdaq climbed 189.04 points to 10,931.67.

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