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SEPTEMBER 20, 2017 / 4:36 pM
Wall
St. closes slightly higher after Fed policy decisions
DJ: 22,412.59 +41.79 NAS: 6,456.04
-5.28 S&P: 2,508.24 +1.59 9/20
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The
S&P 500 and the Dow ended slightly higher on Wednesday, adding to their
string of closing records, after the Federal Reserve signaled it expects
another interest rate hike by year-end and disclosed timing for reducing its
balance sheet. The Fed left rates
unchanged for now, as was widely anticipated, but investors’ expectations
changed for December after the U.S. central bank signaled one more rate hike by
year-end despite recent weak inflation readings.
In line with expectations the Fed said it would begin in October to cut its
roughly $4.2 trillion in U.S. Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed
securities holdings by initially cutting up to $10 billion each month from the amount of maturing
securities it reinvests.
Financial stocks jumped after the statement as U.S. Treasury
yields rose on the
prospect of higher rates while utilities took a fall on concerns that
the defensive sector would look less attractive as rates climb.
While some investors said the Fed’s tone was more hawkish than
expected others were happy Fed Chair Janet Yellen reiterated her stance that balance sheet reduction would
be data dependent.
“The most important thing Yellen needed to communicate to the
market was that the bond sale plan and rate increases are not on autopilot,”
said Jason Pride, director of investment strategy at Glenmede in Philadelphia. After the statement traders were betting on a
roughly 67 percent chance
of a December hike, compared with 51 percent minutes before, according
to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool. “Keeping
rate hikes where they were was expected. What wasn’t known was the tone. The
market reaction is interpreting the Fed as slightly hawkish but not too much,”
said Victor Jones, director of trading at TD Ameritrade in Chicago.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average .DJI rose 41.79 points, or 0.19 percent to
end at 22,412.59, its seventh straight record close. The S&P 500 .SPX gained 1.59 points, or 0.06 percent, to
2,508.24, clocking its sixth record closing high in the last seven sessions.
The Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped 5.28 points, or 0.08 percent, to
6,456.04, with Apple Inc (AAPL.O) as its biggest drag.
The S&P’s financial .SPSY sector ended 0.6 percent higher as banks benefit
from higher rates. The sector has risen in eight of the last nine
sessions and has clocked a 6.7 percent gain in that time as investors
anticipated the Fed meeting.
The consumer staples sector .SPLRCS fell 0.9 percent while the
utilities sector .SPLRCU ended 0.8 percent lower.
Shares of Apple fell 1.7 percent after it admitted its latest
smartwatch has connectivity problems.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a
1.26-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.30-to-1 ratio favored advancers.
Roughly 6.7
billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges compared with the 6
billion average for the last 20 sessions.
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