James "Jim" Bullard who is the president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, is crossing the wires and says that he ''won't emphasize single inflation report too much but inflation is more persistent than many have thought.''
His comments, that follow, come after today's Consumer Price Index report that has contributed t markets turning on a dime in recent trade and sell off to session lows.
The markets are in a freefall into the closing bell on Wall Street on hawkish Fed sentiment. Markets have digested the inflation data over the course of the trading day making for swings in risk sentiment and price action across the financial asset classes. It was a mixed report in that the Consumer Price Index climbed 8.3%, higher than the 8.1% estimate but below the 8.5% in the prior month.
Also, the index rose just 0.3% last month, the smallest gain since last August, the Labor Department said on Wednesday, versus the 1.2% MoM surge in the CPI in March, the most significant advance since September 2005. However, ''the fact that the CPI is driven by rents and services implies that price pressures are entrenched and may manifest in upward pressure on wages too,'' analysts at TD Securities argued. The sentiment is weighing on US stocks into the closing bell.
At the time of writing, the Dow Jones Industrial Average is falling some 1% giving up earlier gains to print fresh lows for the session. The S&P 500 slid 1.7% after increasing 0.5% earlier in the session to new session lows and the Nasdaq Composite has dropped by over 3%, currently extending intraday declines while the 2-year yield increased to 2.857% and is aligned closely with Federal Reserve's interest rate policy.
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