Wall Street wavers: the Fed is now talking rate hikes
A mixed bag for markets on Monday. The Nasdaq fell on Alphabet, oil eased on the Iran news, and all eyes are on Wednesday's inflation print.
The week opened with US markets drifting sideways, each index pulling in its own direction. The Dow gained about 0.4%, the S&P 500 slipped 0.3%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq dropped 1.1% — largely because Alphabet, Google’s parent, fell around 5% in a single day.
Behind the hesitation sits the Federal Reserve. After its latest meeting the tone shifted: nine of eighteen members now expect at least one rate hike before year-end, and some see that move coming as soon as October. That’s quite a turn — for months the talk was about cutting, now it’s about tightening, because inflation stubbornly sits above 2%.
What’s next
Two things to watch. Wednesday brings the May PCE index, the Fed’s favourite inflation gauge — if it runs hot, it strengthens the case for a hike. And oil eased after Iran and the US agreed a peace roadmap, taking some pressure off prices.
For Portugal, none of this is abstract. Higher US rates pull the dollar up and ripple through everything, from credit to import costs. When the world’s biggest economy tightens its belt, the echo reaches us here.
Illustrative · Photo: William Doll II / Pexels