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Wall Street Today | Fed minutes point to earlier hikes, balance-sheet rundown

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Moomoo Recap US wrote a column · Jan 5, 2022 17:54
Wall Street Today | Fed minutes point to earlier hikes, balance-sheet rundown
Asia stocks to fall as tech rout deepens on Fed
Stocks in Asia are set to open weaker after a selloff in U.S. technology shares and Treasuries accelerated once Federal Reserve minutes signaled interest-rate hikes may be more aggressive than many had expected.
Australian equities slipped at the open, while Japan futures fell. U.S. contracts dropped after the $NASDAQ 100 Index(.NDX.US)$ tumbled the most since March as rising Treasury yields added to concerns over growth and profitability. The $S&P 500 Index(.SPX.US)$ retreated as traders increased bets U.S. rates will increase at least three times this year.
Fed minutes flag chance of earlier hikes, balance-sheet rundown
Federal Reserve officials said a strengthening economy and higher inflation could lead to earlier and faster interest-rate increases than previously expected, with some policy makers also favoring starting to shrink the balance sheet soon after.
"Participants generally noted that, given their individual outlooks for the economy, the labor market, and inflation, it may become warranted to increase the federal funds rate sooner or at a faster pace than participants had earlier anticipated," according to minutes published Wednesday of the Dec. 14-15 meeting of the U.S. central bank's policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee, when it pivoted to a more aggressive inflation-fighting stance.
AMC, GameStop lead meme stocks to lowest close since January 2021
$AMC Entertainment(AMC.US)$ and $GameStop(GME.US)$ led a group of so-called meme stocks sharply lower on Wednesday amid a broad selloff that hit everything, from high-flying technology stocks to companies that went public via mergers with blank-check firms.
AMC closed 11% lower in New York, while GameStop declined 13%, helping send the basket of meme stocks tracked by Bloomberg to its lowest close since Jan. 21 when the market was swept up in the rise of retail trader-driven surges.
Nasdaq-listed firm says it will offer the first bitcoin dividend
$BTCS Inc(BTCS.US)$, a small Nasdaq-listed blockchain technology-focused company, said it is the first to offer investors the option of receiving a dividend issued in Bitcoin.
The Silver Spring, Maryland-based firm said in a statement Wednesday that investors will have the option to receive a cash dividend of 5 cents a share or the Bitcoin equivalent based on the price on a given date. The "Bividend" will be payable March 17.
Sony teases new VR headset for its PlayStation 5 console
$Sony(SONY.US)$ confirmed its new virtual reality hardware will be called PlayStation VR2. The headset will work with Sony's PlayStation 5 console, which was released late 2020.
The reveal comes as Facebook-parent Meta and others attempt to capitalize on the "metaverse."
Rivian stock plunges after news of Amazon-Stellantis deal
Stellantis will use Amazon Web Services and other Amazon technology to develop new smart cockpit software. Amazon will be the first commercial customer of Stellantis' Ram ProMaster battery-electric vehicle when it arrives in 2023.
The collaboration between the two companies comes two months after Amazon-backed electric vehicle $Rivian Automotive(RIVN.US)$ debuted on the Nasdaq. Shares of Rivian, which named Amazon its preferred cloud provider in December and has a contract to make 100,000 vehicles for Amazon by 2030, fell 11% in Wednesday's trading session. $Stellantis NV(STLA.US)$ shares moved up 0.3%.
Great stock rotation has legs, Wall Street pros say
As inflation-adjusted yields rise on conviction the Federal Reserve will tighten policy in earnest this year, Wells Fargo Securities and Morgan Stanley are telling clients to wager against high-flying technology firms that were among the biggest beneficiaries of the low-rate era -- in favor of cheaper stocks that gain from the pandemic recovery.
Europe's energy crisis is a warning sign for the U.S., Citi's Morse says
The energy crisis roiling markets in Europe is a preview of what the U.S. will face over the next 10 years as it shifts to cleaner power sources, according to Ed Morse, Citigroup's global head of commodities research.
Source: Bloomberg, CNBC
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