U.S. Opening Bell: Stocks, Futures Rally Post-Fed; Gold Rises, Dollar Slumps

 | Dec 16, 2021 12:03

  • Fed doubles tapering speed, projects multiple rate hikes
  • ECB policy decision on tap; Bank of England unexpectedly hikes rates
  • Treasury yield curve steepens
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US futures, along with European shares, all soared on Thursday, extending yesterday's rebound during the Wall Street session. Contracts on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000, jumped on hopes that Federal Reserve tightening—which the central bank on Wednesday announced it would accelerate—will manage inflation without slowing down economic growth.

    Markets are also waiting for ECB decision scheduled for later today.

    The dollar fell and gold opened higher.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Yesterday, the Fed said it would double the speed at which it's rolling back its emergency bond purchasing program scaling to $30 billion a month. The central bank also projected a 75 BPS interest rate hike over the course of 2022, via three rate adjustments, plus a number of hikes in 2023 to rates up to 1.6%, and to 2.1% in 2024.

    As well, the Federal Reserve warned of the potential risks from the latest COVID variant to the economy. Adding to the headwinds: a potential US-China standoff after the House of Representatives voted to ban imports from the Xinjiang region because of forced labour and human rights abuses.

    The market narrative is now saying investors are confident the world's most powerful central bank will successfully strike a delicate balance between reining in overheating inflation while at the same time not upsetting a fragile economic recovery. We can't say where this optimism stems from, given there's been a long run of awkward, if not clumsy, policymaking coming from the Fed, ever since COVID made its global appearance, not to mention when inflation reared its head.

    We'd be shocked if markets won't get volatile, even violently so, as global central banks begin tightening, especially during the worst global health crisis in a century.

    Futures on the Russell 2000, the stocks most sensitive to a smoothly running economy, led the gainers on Thursday, after technology firms powered Wednesday's rally during the New York session.