© Reuters
Investing.com — The S&P 500 inched higher Monday ahead of inflation data this week that will play a role in the Federal Reserve’s thinking on monetary policy later this month.
The rose 0.1%, the rose 0.50%, or 189 points, and the was up 0.1%.
Inflation in June expected to slow, but Fed likely will lift rates
and reports due Wednesday and Thursday, respectively, are expected to show that monthly price pressures picked up pace in June, but slowed on an annualized basis.
Signs of a slowdown in inflation, however, aren’t likely to avert the Fed from resuming rate hikes later this month, UBS says, as inflation continues to trend above the Fed’s 2% target.
“We expect a notable slowing in core CPI to be reported next week. That said, we think after today’s data, the FOMC remains on track for a July rate hike,” UBS added.
About 92% of traders expect the Fed to hike rates later month, according to Investing.com’s
Big Tech takes breather; Meta steady as Threads trend
Big tech swung lower, pressured by a more than 2% slip in Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ:) and Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:), but Meta Platforms Inc (NASDAQ:) held gains as its Threads app, a Twitter rival, surpassed 100 million sign-ups within just five days after its launch.
The signs of early momentum in Threads come just as data flagged slowing user traffic on Twitter.
Web traffic to Twitter dropped 5% for the first two full days since Threads was launched, compared with the prior week, according to Similarweb (NYSE:), a web analytics company.
Big movers: Carvana, Novavax
Carvana Co (NYSE:), up more than 500% year to date, continued to bring the pain to short sellers of the stock as the online used car retailer surged 13% after announcing that growing demand for electric vehicles is likely to bolster growth.
About 60% of its shares are shorted, making Carvana one of the most shorted stocks on Wall Street.
Novavax (NASDAQ:), meanwhile, racked up a 30% gain after the biotech company said Friday that it expected to receive a $350M funding boost from Canada for unused vaccines.
Read the full article here