© Reuters
Investing.com — The S&P 500 was flat Friday, pressured by a fresh climb in Treasury yields after another measure of inflation came in hotter than expected, deflating investor bets that the Fed is unlikely to resume rate hikes later this year.
The was flat, the rose 0.3%, or 110 points, fell 0.4%.
Wholesale inflation deflates on ‘Fed done’ bets
for final demand increased 0.3% in July, above economists’ forecasts of 0.2%, and pick up from the -0.1% pace seen in June. In the 12 months through July, the PPI rose 2.4%, just above estimates of 2.3%.
“Coupled with yesterday’s headline rise in the CPI, this morning’s hotter-than-expected PPI data deflates – no pun intended – the market’s earlier optimism the Committee will move back to the sidelines in September,” Stifel said in a note.
Treasury yields climbed as bets eased that the Fed may have raised rates for the last time in July, with the inching closer to its October high of 5.12%.
Jump in Treasury yields keep bullish tech bets on ice; Chips sink again
Big tech, with the exception of Apple Inc (NASDAQ:), struggled to turn positive as Meta Platforms Inc (NASDAQ:) led to the downside falling more than 1%.
Chip stocks continued to add pressure on tech, with NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:) slipping 3% as the chipmaker fights to keep its $1 trillion valuation.
Still, some on Wall Street continue to back semis, noting that the recent slew of quarterly results from semis point to an ongoing recovery.
“Recent earnings reports from chip foundries, memory companies and other major chip companies give us confidence that the chip recovery will continue in the coming months,” Nomura said in a note.
NewsCorp Delivers beat on earnings stage
News Corp A (NASDAQ:) reported fiscal fourth-quarter earnings that topped Wall Street , sending its shares more than 4% higher. But the media company’s revenue missed Wall Street estimates due to weakness in its book publishing and digital real estate services businesses, with the latter pressured by challenging housing market conditions in the U.S. and Australia.
Read the full article here