The Standard & Poor's 500 equity index saw a sharp downstep on Thursday after US Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation figures beat market expectations, with the annualized CPI for September printing at 3.7%, holding steady with the previous reading and snubbing the market's forecast decline to 3.6%.
US CPI inflation holds steady at 3.7% in September vs. 3.6% forecast
The data move was minor, but enough to reignite fears of the Federal Reserve's (Fed) higher-for-longer policy stance on interest rates, with sticky inflation in the US set to push out expectations of an eagerly-anticipated rate cut from the US central bank even further into the future.
Markets are currently pricing in an eventual half-point rate cut sometime in 2024, but if inflation continues to edge higher against forecasts, it could see the Fed's dot plot continue to shift further out.
Intraday action as the S&P 500 down past the 50-hour Simple Moving Average (SMA) as Thursday's risk-off plunge sends the major equity index down below the near-term median, but stocks are seeing some mild bidding in a rebound as the S&P recovers to $4,350.
The S&P 500 is still in the green for the trading week, trading up nearly 1.2% from Monday's early opening bids near $4,300.
The S&P 500 has formed a bearish engulfing candle on the daily timeframe, and the equity ticker is set for a continuation of a bearish turnaround from the 50-day SMA at $4,406. The S&P 500 caught a bullish bounce last week from the 200-day SMA near $4,220.
The index still remains on the low end in the medium term and could see Thursday's backslide firming up an extension into a lower-high pattern.
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