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Wall St gains as interim Fed choice stokes dovish bets

Wall St gains as interim Fed choice stokes dovish bets

Perth Now2 days ago
Wall Street has risen, setting up a strong finish to the week, after US President Donald Trump's interim pick for a Fed governor post fuelled expectations of a more dovish policy ahead.
In early trading on Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 134.42 points, or 0.31 per cent, to 44,103.06, the S&P 500 gained 17.22 points, or 0.27 per cent, to 6,357.22 and the Nasdaq Composite advanced 44.83 points, or 0.21 per cent, to 21,287.53.
Trump moved to reshape the Fed on Thursday, nominating Council of Economic Advisers' chair Stephen Miran for a short-term board seat after Adriana Kugler's abrupt exit—and narrowing his shortlist to replace Jerome Powell, whose term ends May 15.
On the same day, Bloomberg News reported that Fed Governor Christopher Waller was emerging as a leading contender for the chair.
Investors were being whipsawed by mixed signals over the Fed's future, as Trump's pressure stirs worries about the central bank's independence and a potential leadership reshuffle that could skew policy looser.
"The reality is the president can't force a chair to step down or put any additional pressure to make the governors to force rates lower. This is about him putting in folks who are going to be more dovish and ultimately (lead) to deeper rate cuts, whether they're justified or not," said Phil Blancato, CEO, Ladenburg Thalmann Asset Management.
In earnings-related moves, Expedia leapt 9.7 per cent after raising its annual forecast for gross bookings and revenue growth.
Monster Beverage gained 9.0 per cent as the companybeatestimates for its second-quarter results.
Gilead Sciences jumped 8.9 per cent following its raising of the full-year financial outlook.
Trade Desk sank 38 per cent in after the ad-tech firm reported a sharp slowdown in second-quarter revenue growth.
Pinterest tumbled 11.5 per cent as the social media platform missed analysts' estimates for second-quarter profit.
Sector-wise, consumer discretionary could top the leaderboard this week, while healthcare lags, weighed down mainly by Eli Lilly.
The drugmaker fell 14.1 per cent in the previous session after results from a late-stage study on its experimental GLP-1 pill fell behind that of Novo Nordisk's .
On the day, all sectors were trading in the green.
Meanwhile, both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq were on track for their best week in over a month, while the Dow was on track to log modest gains.
Equities have ridden a dramatic reset in rate expectations and a flurry of upbeat earnings.
Traders now peg a 90 per cent chance of the first rate cut hitting next month, according CME's Fedwatch tool, with futures pointing to at least two cuts by year-end.
US tariffs on a bunch of trading partners took effect at midnight on Thursday.
Tokyo's trade negotiator said Washington will amend a presidential executive order to remove overlapping tariffs on Japanese goods, terming it as oversight.
In a rebuke to Washington, New Delhi shelved fresh US arms and aircraft purchases, according to three Indian officials, after Trump-era tariffs pushed relations to their lowest point in years.
St Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem is scheduled to speak later in the morning local time.
Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by a 2.33-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and by a 1.63-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq.
The S&P 500 posted 11 new 52-week highs and two new lows, while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 38 new highs and 32 new lows.
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Armenians caught between hope and distrust after accord with Azerbaijan

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Hopes RBA won't repeat shock rates hold as board meets

Perth Now

time40 minutes ago

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Hopes RBA won't repeat shock rates hold as board meets

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