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After inflation data, stocks rise and US Treasury yields fall

The global stock index rose on Thursday, the first time in the last three sessions. Meanwhile, U.S. Treasury yields fell as a reading of inflation fueled hope that the Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of price might be lower than expected.

The Labor Department announced that the Producer Price Index (PPI) was for

Final demand rose

After a downwardly revised 0.5% increase in December, the 0.4% rise last month surpassed the economists' estimate for a 0.3% gain.

The consumer price index (CPI) for Wednesday showed the largest increase in almost 1-1/2 years.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell has said that the PPI includes components that make up the personal consumption expenditures.

On Wednesday

The PCE, the Fed's preferred inflation target measure, was softened and added to the hope that the reading could be lower than expected.

It looks like core PCE is going to come out around 0.3%. That's still high compared to January last year when it was only 0.5%. If the forecast is accurate, core PCE will fall from 2.8% down to 2.6% over the course of a year, said Chris Diaz. Diaz is co-head fixed income at Brown Advisory, Chicago.

There will be enough downward pressure on the housing component and wages to continue to bring down inflation.

The Nasdaq was up over 1% on Wall Street after the release of the US inflation data. All S&P sectors rose, but materials led the way.

MGM Resorts, which had just opened its casino, saw a jump of nearly 17% and Tesla rose by about 5%.

operator reported

Better than expected quarterly earnings

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 343.48 points or 0.77% to 44,712.04, while the S&P 500 gained 52.00 points or 0.86% to 6,103.96, and the Nasdaq Composite increased by 235.87 or 1.20% to 19,885.82.

The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 8.61 points or 0.99% to 881.39, and is on course for its largest daily percentage gain since Jan 15.

The pan-European STOXX 600 Index rose 1.09% in a fourth consecutive session, closing at a record. Nestle and Siemens gained after their quarterly results. Also, there are hopes that the war between Russia, Ukraine and Ukraine will be ended through talks.

U.S. President Donald

Trump says

On Wednesday, Trump said that both Russian president Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy expressed their desire for peace during separate phone conversations with him. He also ordered top U.S. government officials to start talks about ending the war.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. notes fell 11.3 basis points, to 4.521%. This is on course for its largest daily decline in a whole month. In addition to the PPI data the U.S. initial unemployment claims dropped 7,000 points, bringing them down to 213,000 seasonally adjusted, a level that is slightly lower than the 215,000 mark and indicates the job market is still on stable ground.

According to CME, the market has not priced in a probability of greater than 50% of a Fed rate cut of at least 25% until September.

FedWatch Tool

The dollar index (which measures the greenback versus a basket currencies) fell 0.52% at 107.35, and was on course for its largest one-day percentage decline since January 24. At $1.0432, the euro rose 0.48%.

Boris, a Croatian politician

Vujcic

The European Central Bank may cut rates three times more this year, even if the U.S. counterpart moves slower. However, policy easing will be based on a rapid drop in inflation.

The dollar fell 0.92% against the Japanese yen to 152.99.

The pound rose 0.68%, to $1.2527. Official figures revealed that the British economy grew unexpectedly by 0.1% during the last quarter of the year. This was higher than the 0.1% contraction expected. However, longer-term problems remain.

Oil prices are rising.

The market is slightly lower and has recovered from its earlier declines. This was due to the downward pressure of hopes for peace negotiations between Russia, Ukraine and other countries being offset by optimism about a temporary pause in U.S. tariffs. U.S. crude fell 0.11%, to $71.29 per barrel. Brent dropped 0.21%, to $75.02 a barrel.

(source: Reuters)