Global stocks drop amid fresh Fed’s rate hike fears

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

Rate-sensitive and high-growth tech stocks led the losses on concerns for softening demand and the hawkish stance by Fed, with tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite settling 2,20% lower on Thursday, ahead of the third week of losses in a row.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

Rate-sensitive and high-growth tech stocks led the losses on concerns for softening demand and the hawkish stance by Fed, with tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite settling 2,20% lower on Thursday, ahead of the third week of losses in a row.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

The selling pressure on stocks resumed yesterday as economists and traders remained concerned that further monetary tightening from central banks around the world will push the economy into a recession.

Rate-sensitive and high-growth tech stocks led the losses on concerns for softening demand and the hawkish stance by Fed, with tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite settling 2,20% lower on Thursday, ahead of the third week of losses in a row.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

The selling pressure on stocks resumed yesterday as economists and traders remained concerned that further monetary tightening from central banks around the world will push the economy into a recession.

Rate-sensitive and high-growth tech stocks led the losses on concerns for softening demand and the hawkish stance by Fed, with tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite settling 2,20% lower on Thursday, ahead of the third week of losses in a row.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

Market reaction:

The selling pressure on stocks resumed yesterday as economists and traders remained concerned that further monetary tightening from central banks around the world will push the economy into a recession.

Rate-sensitive and high-growth tech stocks led the losses on concerns for softening demand and the hawkish stance by Fed, with tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite settling 2,20% lower on Thursday, ahead of the third week of losses in a row.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

Market reaction:

The selling pressure on stocks resumed yesterday as economists and traders remained concerned that further monetary tightening from central banks around the world will push the economy into a recession.

Rate-sensitive and high-growth tech stocks led the losses on concerns for softening demand and the hawkish stance by Fed, with tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite settling 2,20% lower on Thursday, ahead of the third week of losses in a row.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

While an upward revision of the GDP would normally be viewed as a positive catalyst for the markets, amid the Fed’s tightening phase it triggers market participants’ fear that the Fed’s funds target rate could rise higher and stay there longer than previously expected, raising the possibility of an economic contraction in 2023.

Market reaction:

The selling pressure on stocks resumed yesterday as economists and traders remained concerned that further monetary tightening from central banks around the world will push the economy into a recession.

Rate-sensitive and high-growth tech stocks led the losses on concerns for softening demand and the hawkish stance by Fed, with tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite settling 2,20% lower on Thursday, ahead of the third week of losses in a row.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

While an upward revision of the GDP would normally be viewed as a positive catalyst for the markets, amid the Fed’s tightening phase it triggers market participants’ fear that the Fed’s funds target rate could rise higher and stay there longer than previously expected, raising the possibility of an economic contraction in 2023.

Market reaction:

The selling pressure on stocks resumed yesterday as economists and traders remained concerned that further monetary tightening from central banks around the world will push the economy into a recession.

Rate-sensitive and high-growth tech stocks led the losses on concerns for softening demand and the hawkish stance by Fed, with tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite settling 2,20% lower on Thursday, ahead of the third week of losses in a row.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

U.S. stocks extended losses yesterday and the U.S. dollar rebounded from monthly lows after an upward revision to U.S Q3 GDP for 3.2% annualized growth, above the previous estimate of 2.9%, underscoring U.S. economic resiliency amid the Fed’s battle against inflation.

While an upward revision of the GDP would normally be viewed as a positive catalyst for the markets, amid the Fed’s tightening phase it triggers market participants’ fear that the Fed’s funds target rate could rise higher and stay there longer than previously expected, raising the possibility of an economic contraction in 2023.

Market reaction:

The selling pressure on stocks resumed yesterday as economists and traders remained concerned that further monetary tightening from central banks around the world will push the economy into a recession.

Rate-sensitive and high-growth tech stocks led the losses on concerns for softening demand and the hawkish stance by Fed, with tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite settling 2,20% lower on Thursday, ahead of the third week of losses in a row.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

U.S. stocks extended losses yesterday and the U.S. dollar rebounded from monthly lows after an upward revision to U.S Q3 GDP for 3.2% annualized growth, above the previous estimate of 2.9%, underscoring U.S. economic resiliency amid the Fed’s battle against inflation.

While an upward revision of the GDP would normally be viewed as a positive catalyst for the markets, amid the Fed’s tightening phase it triggers market participants’ fear that the Fed’s funds target rate could rise higher and stay there longer than previously expected, raising the possibility of an economic contraction in 2023.

Market reaction:

The selling pressure on stocks resumed yesterday as economists and traders remained concerned that further monetary tightening from central banks around the world will push the economy into a recession.

Rate-sensitive and high-growth tech stocks led the losses on concerns for softening demand and the hawkish stance by Fed, with tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite settling 2,20% lower on Thursday, ahead of the third week of losses in a row.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

Global stocks closed lower on Thursday, after pulling back from session lows, on growing concerns that the stronger-than-expected U.S GDP and the resilient labor market would lead the Federal Reserve to keep hiking interest rates for longer than investors may have hoped to fight the four-decade record high inflation.

U.S. stocks extended losses yesterday and the U.S. dollar rebounded from monthly lows after an upward revision to U.S Q3 GDP for 3.2% annualized growth, above the previous estimate of 2.9%, underscoring U.S. economic resiliency amid the Fed’s battle against inflation.

While an upward revision of the GDP would normally be viewed as a positive catalyst for the markets, amid the Fed’s tightening phase it triggers market participants’ fear that the Fed’s funds target rate could rise higher and stay there longer than previously expected, raising the possibility of an economic contraction in 2023.

Market reaction:

The selling pressure on stocks resumed yesterday as economists and traders remained concerned that further monetary tightening from central banks around the world will push the economy into a recession.

Rate-sensitive and high-growth tech stocks led the losses on concerns for softening demand and the hawkish stance by Fed, with tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite settling 2,20% lower on Thursday, ahead of the third week of losses in a row.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

Global stocks closed lower on Thursday, after pulling back from session lows, on growing concerns that the stronger-than-expected U.S GDP and the resilient labor market would lead the Federal Reserve to keep hiking interest rates for longer than investors may have hoped to fight the four-decade record high inflation.

U.S. stocks extended losses yesterday and the U.S. dollar rebounded from monthly lows after an upward revision to U.S Q3 GDP for 3.2% annualized growth, above the previous estimate of 2.9%, underscoring U.S. economic resiliency amid the Fed’s battle against inflation.

While an upward revision of the GDP would normally be viewed as a positive catalyst for the markets, amid the Fed’s tightening phase it triggers market participants’ fear that the Fed’s funds target rate could rise higher and stay there longer than previously expected, raising the possibility of an economic contraction in 2023.

Market reaction:

The selling pressure on stocks resumed yesterday as economists and traders remained concerned that further monetary tightening from central banks around the world will push the economy into a recession.

Rate-sensitive and high-growth tech stocks led the losses on concerns for softening demand and the hawkish stance by Fed, with tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite settling 2,20% lower on Thursday, ahead of the third week of losses in a row.

Nasdaq Composite, Daily chart

The Dow Jones index dropped 349 points, or 1.05% to 33,027, after falling as much as 803 points earlier in the session, almost writing off the +1,5% gains on Wednesday after the better-than-expected earnings from Nike and FedEx.

The S&P 500 index declined 1.45% last night and is on track for a nearly 20% annual drop so far, which would be its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.

With the end of December around the corner, Dow Jones is down 4.5% on the month so far, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have tumbled 6.3% and 8.7%, respectively.

All three major averages are lined up to break a 3-year win streak and post their worst yearly performance since 2008, driven by the recession fears and the aggressive tightening and rate hiking by Fed to curb the inflationary pressure.

Asian markets also ended lower on Friday morning, taking the lead from the overnight losses on Wall Street. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Chinese indices fell as much as 1% during the session before ending much higher heading at the closing bell.

Best Exclusive Christmas Party yet!

But the most fun moment of the party was our Funny Employee Awards Ceremony. Twenty-four awards (such as the Cleanest Desk, the Pen Stealer, the Rockstar, the Fashionista, the Always in a Meeting) were given to the 24 winners of each category. Every Exclusive team member was nominated in each category, and the winners were announced at the party and received beautiful gold trophies and award certificates.

Team-bonding initiatives are of the utmost importance here at Exclusive Capital and our annual Christmas Party provides an excellent opportunity for us to come together as a team in a fun and exciting way. Of course, we jingled and mingled over food, drinks, music and dancing, but most importantly, we spent some fun, quality time together, establishing that We Are Exclusive!

Renewing a year-end tradition, we threw our best Christmas Party yet!

This year, our Christmas party featured a special occasion as Exclusive Capital’s co-founder and managing director, Lambros Lambrou, celebrated five years since the very beginning of the company. A heartfelt “thank you” video from the company’s founder and CEO, Viktor Madarasz and the rest of the Exclusive team to Mr Lambrou was screened during the party and the touching moment was the highlight of the party.

But the most fun moment of the party was our Funny Employee Awards Ceremony. Twenty-four awards (such as the Cleanest Desk, the Pen Stealer, the Rockstar, the Fashionista, the Always in a Meeting) were given to the 24 winners of each category. Every Exclusive team member was nominated in each category, and the winners were announced at the party and received beautiful gold trophies and award certificates.

Team-bonding initiatives are of the utmost importance here at Exclusive Capital and our annual Christmas Party provides an excellent opportunity for us to come together as a team in a fun and exciting way. Of course, we jingled and mingled over food, drinks, music and dancing, but most importantly, we spent some fun, quality time together, establishing that We Are Exclusive!

Renewing a year-end tradition, we threw our best Christmas Party yet!

This year, our Christmas party featured a special occasion as Exclusive Capital’s co-founder and managing director, Lambros Lambrou, celebrated five years since the very beginning of the company. A heartfelt “thank you” video from the company’s founder and CEO, Viktor Madarasz and the rest of the Exclusive team to Mr Lambrou was screened during the party and the touching moment was the highlight of the party.

But the most fun moment of the party was our Funny Employee Awards Ceremony. Twenty-four awards (such as the Cleanest Desk, the Pen Stealer, the Rockstar, the Fashionista, the Always in a Meeting) were given to the 24 winners of each category. Every Exclusive team member was nominated in each category, and the winners were announced at the party and received beautiful gold trophies and award certificates.

Team-bonding initiatives are of the utmost importance here at Exclusive Capital and our annual Christmas Party provides an excellent opportunity for us to come together as a team in a fun and exciting way. Of course, we jingled and mingled over food, drinks, music and dancing, but most importantly, we spent some fun, quality time together, establishing that We Are Exclusive!

Renewing a year-end tradition, we threw our best Christmas Party yet!

This year, our Christmas party featured a special occasion as Exclusive Capital’s co-founder and managing director, Lambros Lambrou, celebrated five years since the very beginning of the company. A heartfelt “thank you” video from the company’s founder and CEO, Viktor Madarasz and the rest of the Exclusive team to Mr Lambrou was screened during the party and the touching moment was the highlight of the party.

But the most fun moment of the party was our Funny Employee Awards Ceremony. Twenty-four awards (such as the Cleanest Desk, the Pen Stealer, the Rockstar, the Fashionista, the Always in a Meeting) were given to the 24 winners of each category. Every Exclusive team member was nominated in each category, and the winners were announced at the party and received beautiful gold trophies and award certificates.

Team-bonding initiatives are of the utmost importance here at Exclusive Capital and our annual Christmas Party provides an excellent opportunity for us to come together as a team in a fun and exciting way. Of course, we jingled and mingled over food, drinks, music and dancing, but most importantly, we spent some fun, quality time together, establishing that We Are Exclusive!

Japanese Yen rises to ¥131 a dollar on BoJ’s monetary policy shift

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

Some investors have already started reversing their bullish bets on the USD/JPY pair on worries the BoJ’s hawkish swing on monetary policy could indicate the start of a hawkish policy change, while some others are debating that the move is a one-off technical adjustment.

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

Some investors have already started reversing their bullish bets on the USD/JPY pair on worries the BoJ’s hawkish swing on monetary policy could indicate the start of a hawkish policy change, while some others are debating that the move is a one-off technical adjustment.

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

The unexpected move has shocked forex traders helping the Yen to recover significantly against major peers, as the ultra-dovish monetary policy stance by BoJ was one of the main catalysts of the Yen to hit a multi-decade low of ¥152 a dollar in mid-November 2022.

Some investors have already started reversing their bullish bets on the USD/JPY pair on worries the BoJ’s hawkish swing on monetary policy could indicate the start of a hawkish policy change, while some others are debating that the move is a one-off technical adjustment.

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

The unexpected move has shocked forex traders helping the Yen to recover significantly against major peers, as the ultra-dovish monetary policy stance by BoJ was one of the main catalysts of the Yen to hit a multi-decade low of ¥152 a dollar in mid-November 2022.

Some investors have already started reversing their bullish bets on the USD/JPY pair on worries the BoJ’s hawkish swing on monetary policy could indicate the start of a hawkish policy change, while some others are debating that the move is a one-off technical adjustment.

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

According to the announcement, the BoJ will allow its 10-year Japanese government yields to rise as much as 50 basis points, or 0.5%, up from a previous cap of 0.25%.

The unexpected move has shocked forex traders helping the Yen to recover significantly against major peers, as the ultra-dovish monetary policy stance by BoJ was one of the main catalysts of the Yen to hit a multi-decade low of ¥152 a dollar in mid-November 2022.

Some investors have already started reversing their bullish bets on the USD/JPY pair on worries the BoJ’s hawkish swing on monetary policy could indicate the start of a hawkish policy change, while some others are debating that the move is a one-off technical adjustment.

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

According to the announcement, the BoJ will allow its 10-year Japanese government yields to rise as much as 50 basis points, or 0.5%, up from a previous cap of 0.25%.

The unexpected move has shocked forex traders helping the Yen to recover significantly against major peers, as the ultra-dovish monetary policy stance by BoJ was one of the main catalysts of the Yen to hit a multi-decade low of ¥152 a dollar in mid-November 2022.

Some investors have already started reversing their bullish bets on the USD/JPY pair on worries the BoJ’s hawkish swing on monetary policy could indicate the start of a hawkish policy change, while some others are debating that the move is a one-off technical adjustment.

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

On Tuesday, the USD/JPY pair hit a four-month low of ¥130,50 after the widely unexpected decision of the BoJ to widen the range within which it allows yields on the benchmark 10-year government bonds to fluctuate, a potential sign that the central bank eventually intends to tighten policy amid rising inflation.

According to the announcement, the BoJ will allow its 10-year Japanese government yields to rise as much as 50 basis points, or 0.5%, up from a previous cap of 0.25%.

The unexpected move has shocked forex traders helping the Yen to recover significantly against major peers, as the ultra-dovish monetary policy stance by BoJ was one of the main catalysts of the Yen to hit a multi-decade low of ¥152 a dollar in mid-November 2022.

Some investors have already started reversing their bullish bets on the USD/JPY pair on worries the BoJ’s hawkish swing on monetary policy could indicate the start of a hawkish policy change, while some others are debating that the move is a one-off technical adjustment.

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

On Tuesday, the USD/JPY pair hit a four-month low of ¥130,50 after the widely unexpected decision of the BoJ to widen the range within which it allows yields on the benchmark 10-year government bonds to fluctuate, a potential sign that the central bank eventually intends to tighten policy amid rising inflation.

According to the announcement, the BoJ will allow its 10-year Japanese government yields to rise as much as 50 basis points, or 0.5%, up from a previous cap of 0.25%.

The unexpected move has shocked forex traders helping the Yen to recover significantly against major peers, as the ultra-dovish monetary policy stance by BoJ was one of the main catalysts of the Yen to hit a multi-decade low of ¥152 a dollar in mid-November 2022.

Some investors have already started reversing their bullish bets on the USD/JPY pair on worries the BoJ’s hawkish swing on monetary policy could indicate the start of a hawkish policy change, while some others are debating that the move is a one-off technical adjustment.

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

USD/JPY pair, Daily chart

On Tuesday, the USD/JPY pair hit a four-month low of ¥130,50 after the widely unexpected decision of the BoJ to widen the range within which it allows yields on the benchmark 10-year government bonds to fluctuate, a potential sign that the central bank eventually intends to tighten policy amid rising inflation.

According to the announcement, the BoJ will allow its 10-year Japanese government yields to rise as much as 50 basis points, or 0.5%, up from a previous cap of 0.25%.

The unexpected move has shocked forex traders helping the Yen to recover significantly against major peers, as the ultra-dovish monetary policy stance by BoJ was one of the main catalysts of the Yen to hit a multi-decade low of ¥152 a dollar in mid-November 2022.

Some investors have already started reversing their bullish bets on the USD/JPY pair on worries the BoJ’s hawkish swing on monetary policy could indicate the start of a hawkish policy change, while some others are debating that the move is a one-off technical adjustment.

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

USD/JPY pair, Daily chart

On Tuesday, the USD/JPY pair hit a four-month low of ¥130,50 after the widely unexpected decision of the BoJ to widen the range within which it allows yields on the benchmark 10-year government bonds to fluctuate, a potential sign that the central bank eventually intends to tighten policy amid rising inflation.

According to the announcement, the BoJ will allow its 10-year Japanese government yields to rise as much as 50 basis points, or 0.5%, up from a previous cap of 0.25%.

The unexpected move has shocked forex traders helping the Yen to recover significantly against major peers, as the ultra-dovish monetary policy stance by BoJ was one of the main catalysts of the Yen to hit a multi-decade low of ¥152 a dollar in mid-November 2022.

Some investors have already started reversing their bullish bets on the USD/JPY pair on worries the BoJ’s hawkish swing on monetary policy could indicate the start of a hawkish policy change, while some others are debating that the move is a one-off technical adjustment.

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

USD/JPY pair, Daily chart

On Tuesday, the USD/JPY pair hit a four-month low of ¥130,50 after the widely unexpected decision of the BoJ to widen the range within which it allows yields on the benchmark 10-year government bonds to fluctuate, a potential sign that the central bank eventually intends to tighten policy amid rising inflation.

According to the announcement, the BoJ will allow its 10-year Japanese government yields to rise as much as 50 basis points, or 0.5%, up from a previous cap of 0.25%.

The unexpected move has shocked forex traders helping the Yen to recover significantly against major peers, as the ultra-dovish monetary policy stance by BoJ was one of the main catalysts of the Yen to hit a multi-decade low of ¥152 a dollar in mid-November 2022.

Some investors have already started reversing their bullish bets on the USD/JPY pair on worries the BoJ’s hawkish swing on monetary policy could indicate the start of a hawkish policy change, while some others are debating that the move is a one-off technical adjustment.

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

Japanese Yen has posted some outsizing gains this week, climbing as high as ¥130 a dollar following the Bank of Japan’s decision to allow the 10-year bond yield to move in a wider band, which might be the first step towards a broader monetary policy normalization process in the country to curb the record-high inflation.

USD/JPY pair, Daily chart

On Tuesday, the USD/JPY pair hit a four-month low of ¥130,50 after the widely unexpected decision of the BoJ to widen the range within which it allows yields on the benchmark 10-year government bonds to fluctuate, a potential sign that the central bank eventually intends to tighten policy amid rising inflation.

According to the announcement, the BoJ will allow its 10-year Japanese government yields to rise as much as 50 basis points, or 0.5%, up from a previous cap of 0.25%.

The unexpected move has shocked forex traders helping the Yen to recover significantly against major peers, as the ultra-dovish monetary policy stance by BoJ was one of the main catalysts of the Yen to hit a multi-decade low of ¥152 a dollar in mid-November 2022.

Some investors have already started reversing their bullish bets on the USD/JPY pair on worries the BoJ’s hawkish swing on monetary policy could indicate the start of a hawkish policy change, while some others are debating that the move is a one-off technical adjustment.

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

Japanese Yen has posted some outsizing gains this week, climbing as high as ¥130 a dollar following the Bank of Japan’s decision to allow the 10-year bond yield to move in a wider band, which might be the first step towards a broader monetary policy normalization process in the country to curb the record-high inflation.

USD/JPY pair, Daily chart

On Tuesday, the USD/JPY pair hit a four-month low of ¥130,50 after the widely unexpected decision of the BoJ to widen the range within which it allows yields on the benchmark 10-year government bonds to fluctuate, a potential sign that the central bank eventually intends to tighten policy amid rising inflation.

According to the announcement, the BoJ will allow its 10-year Japanese government yields to rise as much as 50 basis points, or 0.5%, up from a previous cap of 0.25%.

The unexpected move has shocked forex traders helping the Yen to recover significantly against major peers, as the ultra-dovish monetary policy stance by BoJ was one of the main catalysts of the Yen to hit a multi-decade low of ¥152 a dollar in mid-November 2022.

Some investors have already started reversing their bullish bets on the USD/JPY pair on worries the BoJ’s hawkish swing on monetary policy could indicate the start of a hawkish policy change, while some others are debating that the move is a one-off technical adjustment.

Adding to the above, BoJ Governor Kuroda said the move was needed to correct distortions in the yield curve after global bond pressures pushed Japanese government bonds higher, and the action shouldn’t be viewed as the beginning of a hawkish pivot.

Sponsoring the fundraising event ”Christmas Village EpiDrasi 2022”

 

We are thrilled and humbled that our dedication to community engagement and corporate citizenship is gaining so much broad support. The wonderful people of Cyprus embracing good causes with love and willingness to positively impact society motivate and inspire us to continue our philanthropical work and give back to our communities.

 

 

The event’s highlight was the concert with a performance by the famous Greek singer, Alkistis Protopsalti, who entertained the crowd on the last night, a wonderful evening full of music and love.

 

We are thrilled and humbled that our dedication to community engagement and corporate citizenship is gaining so much broad support. The wonderful people of Cyprus embracing good causes with love and willingness to positively impact society motivate and inspire us to continue our philanthropical work and give back to our communities.

 

The magic of Christmas was all around, with hundreds of people spreading the holiday spirit of kindness in a festive atmosphere full of delicious food, feel-good music and exciting games and activities for children.

 

The event’s highlight was the concert with a performance by the famous Greek singer, Alkistis Protopsalti, who entertained the crowd on the last night, a wonderful evening full of music and love.

 

We are thrilled and humbled that our dedication to community engagement and corporate citizenship is gaining so much broad support. The wonderful people of Cyprus embracing good causes with love and willingness to positively impact society motivate and inspire us to continue our philanthropical work and give back to our communities.

 

 

The magic of Christmas was all around, with hundreds of people spreading the holiday spirit of kindness in a festive atmosphere full of delicious food, feel-good music and exciting games and activities for children.

 

The event’s highlight was the concert with a performance by the famous Greek singer, Alkistis Protopsalti, who entertained the crowd on the last night, a wonderful evening full of music and love.

 

We are thrilled and humbled that our dedication to community engagement and corporate citizenship is gaining so much broad support. The wonderful people of Cyprus embracing good causes with love and willingness to positively impact society motivate and inspire us to continue our philanthropical work and give back to our communities.

 

The event was organized and hosted by the charity organization “Epidrasi” to raise funds for the support of the non-governmental charitable organization “Baby Miracles” (Mora Thavmata), a member of the European Federation for the Care of Newborn Infants (EFCNI) (European Foundation for the Care of Newborn Infants).

 

The magic of Christmas was all around, with hundreds of people spreading the holiday spirit of kindness in a festive atmosphere full of delicious food, feel-good music and exciting games and activities for children.

 

The event’s highlight was the concert with a performance by the famous Greek singer, Alkistis Protopsalti, who entertained the crowd on the last night, a wonderful evening full of music and love.

 

We are thrilled and humbled that our dedication to community engagement and corporate citizenship is gaining so much broad support. The wonderful people of Cyprus embracing good causes with love and willingness to positively impact society motivate and inspire us to continue our philanthropical work and give back to our communities.

 

 

The event was organized and hosted by the charity organization “Epidrasi” to raise funds for the support of the non-governmental charitable organization “Baby Miracles” (Mora Thavmata), a member of the European Federation for the Care of Newborn Infants (EFCNI) (European Foundation for the Care of Newborn Infants).

 

The magic of Christmas was all around, with hundreds of people spreading the holiday spirit of kindness in a festive atmosphere full of delicious food, feel-good music and exciting games and activities for children.

 

The event’s highlight was the concert with a performance by the famous Greek singer, Alkistis Protopsalti, who entertained the crowd on the last night, a wonderful evening full of music and love.

 

We are thrilled and humbled that our dedication to community engagement and corporate citizenship is gaining so much broad support. The wonderful people of Cyprus embracing good causes with love and willingness to positively impact society motivate and inspire us to continue our philanthropical work and give back to our communities.

 

In this regard, it was our immense pleasure to sponsor the charity Christmas Village which took place from the 9th to the 11th of December 2022, in Eleftherias Square, Episkopi, Limassol.

 

The event was organized and hosted by the charity organization “Epidrasi” to raise funds for the support of the non-governmental charitable organization “Baby Miracles” (Mora Thavmata), a member of the European Federation for the Care of Newborn Infants (EFCNI) (European Foundation for the Care of Newborn Infants).

 

The magic of Christmas was all around, with hundreds of people spreading the holiday spirit of kindness in a festive atmosphere full of delicious food, feel-good music and exciting games and activities for children.

 

The event’s highlight was the concert with a performance by the famous Greek singer, Alkistis Protopsalti, who entertained the crowd on the last night, a wonderful evening full of music and love.

 

We are thrilled and humbled that our dedication to community engagement and corporate citizenship is gaining so much broad support. The wonderful people of Cyprus embracing good causes with love and willingness to positively impact society motivate and inspire us to continue our philanthropical work and give back to our communities.

 

 

In this regard, it was our immense pleasure to sponsor the charity Christmas Village which took place from the 9th to the 11th of December 2022, in Eleftherias Square, Episkopi, Limassol.

 

The event was organized and hosted by the charity organization “Epidrasi” to raise funds for the support of the non-governmental charitable organization “Baby Miracles” (Mora Thavmata), a member of the European Federation for the Care of Newborn Infants (EFCNI) (European Foundation for the Care of Newborn Infants).

 

The magic of Christmas was all around, with hundreds of people spreading the holiday spirit of kindness in a festive atmosphere full of delicious food, feel-good music and exciting games and activities for children.

 

The event’s highlight was the concert with a performance by the famous Greek singer, Alkistis Protopsalti, who entertained the crowd on the last night, a wonderful evening full of music and love.

 

We are thrilled and humbled that our dedication to community engagement and corporate citizenship is gaining so much broad support. The wonderful people of Cyprus embracing good causes with love and willingness to positively impact society motivate and inspire us to continue our philanthropical work and give back to our communities.

 

At Exclusive Capital, our commitment to good social influencing is the driving force behind our Corporate Social Responsibility and informs everything we do – from how we invest in our clients and partners to how we invest in our people and communities. Through a series of effective CSR programs, initiatives, philanthropy, and volunteer efforts, we seek to benefit society and make a positive impact by supporting causes and organizations that address the most pressing issues facing our community.

 

In this regard, it was our immense pleasure to sponsor the charity Christmas Village which took place from the 9th to the 11th of December 2022, in Eleftherias Square, Episkopi, Limassol.

 

The event was organized and hosted by the charity organization “Epidrasi” to raise funds for the support of the non-governmental charitable organization “Baby Miracles” (Mora Thavmata), a member of the European Federation for the Care of Newborn Infants (EFCNI) (European Foundation for the Care of Newborn Infants).

 

The magic of Christmas was all around, with hundreds of people spreading the holiday spirit of kindness in a festive atmosphere full of delicious food, feel-good music and exciting games and activities for children.

 

The event’s highlight was the concert with a performance by the famous Greek singer, Alkistis Protopsalti, who entertained the crowd on the last night, a wonderful evening full of music and love.

 

We are thrilled and humbled that our dedication to community engagement and corporate citizenship is gaining so much broad support. The wonderful people of Cyprus embracing good causes with love and willingness to positively impact society motivate and inspire us to continue our philanthropical work and give back to our communities.

 

At Exclusive Capital, our commitment to good social influencing is the driving force behind our Corporate Social Responsibility and informs everything we do – from how we invest in our clients and partners to how we invest in our people and communities. Through a series of effective CSR programs, initiatives, philanthropy, and volunteer efforts, we seek to benefit society and make a positive impact by supporting causes and organizations that address the most pressing issues facing our community.

 

In this regard, it was our immense pleasure to sponsor the charity Christmas Village which took place from the 9th to the 11th of December 2022, in Eleftherias Square, Episkopi, Limassol.

 

The event was organized and hosted by the charity organization “Epidrasi” to raise funds for the support of the non-governmental charitable organization “Baby Miracles” (Mora Thavmata), a member of the European Federation for the Care of Newborn Infants (EFCNI) (European Foundation for the Care of Newborn Infants).

 

The magic of Christmas was all around, with hundreds of people spreading the holiday spirit of kindness in a festive atmosphere full of delicious food, feel-good music and exciting games and activities for children.

 

The event’s highlight was the concert with a performance by the famous Greek singer, Alkistis Protopsalti, who entertained the crowd on the last night, a wonderful evening full of music and love.

 

We are thrilled and humbled that our dedication to community engagement and corporate citizenship is gaining so much broad support. The wonderful people of Cyprus embracing good causes with love and willingness to positively impact society motivate and inspire us to continue our philanthropical work and give back to our communities.

 

Stocks extended weekly losses on rate hike and recession fears

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

Nasdaq Composite, 1-hour chart

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

Nasdaq Composite, 1-hour chart

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

Nasdaq Composite, 1-hour chart

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

U.S. stocks suffered a second straight week of losses last Friday, with Dow Jones falling by 1.66% for the week, the S&P 500 dropping 2.09% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite tumbling 2.72%, as fears continued to mount that the Fed’s aggressive tightening will slip the U.S. economy into a recession.

Nasdaq Composite, 1-hour chart

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

U.S. stocks suffered a second straight week of losses last Friday, with Dow Jones falling by 1.66% for the week, the S&P 500 dropping 2.09% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite tumbling 2.72%, as fears continued to mount that the Fed’s aggressive tightening will slip the U.S. economy into a recession.

Nasdaq Composite, 1-hour chart

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

Market reaction:

U.S. stocks suffered a second straight week of losses last Friday, with Dow Jones falling by 1.66% for the week, the S&P 500 dropping 2.09% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite tumbling 2.72%, as fears continued to mount that the Fed’s aggressive tightening will slip the U.S. economy into a recession.

Nasdaq Composite, 1-hour chart

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

Market reaction:

U.S. stocks suffered a second straight week of losses last Friday, with Dow Jones falling by 1.66% for the week, the S&P 500 dropping 2.09% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite tumbling 2.72%, as fears continued to mount that the Fed’s aggressive tightening will slip the U.S. economy into a recession.

Nasdaq Composite, 1-hour chart

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

The three central banks delivered a smaller 50-basis point rate hike last week, flagging more increases to come, and projecting that interest rates would likely peak at higher-than-expected levels in 2023, hampering economic growth and weighing on the market risk sentiment.

Market reaction:

U.S. stocks suffered a second straight week of losses last Friday, with Dow Jones falling by 1.66% for the week, the S&P 500 dropping 2.09% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite tumbling 2.72%, as fears continued to mount that the Fed’s aggressive tightening will slip the U.S. economy into a recession.

Nasdaq Composite, 1-hour chart

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

The three central banks delivered a smaller 50-basis point rate hike last week, flagging more increases to come, and projecting that interest rates would likely peak at higher-than-expected levels in 2023, hampering economic growth and weighing on the market risk sentiment.

Market reaction:

U.S. stocks suffered a second straight week of losses last Friday, with Dow Jones falling by 1.66% for the week, the S&P 500 dropping 2.09% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite tumbling 2.72%, as fears continued to mount that the Fed’s aggressive tightening will slip the U.S. economy into a recession.

Nasdaq Composite, 1-hour chart

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

Appetite for risky assets eased last week after hawkish signals from the Federal Reserve, Bank of England, and European Central Bank triggered concerns that rising interest rates, a sharp increase in borrowing costs, and persistently high inflation could spark an economic slowdown or a recession in 2023.

The three central banks delivered a smaller 50-basis point rate hike last week, flagging more increases to come, and projecting that interest rates would likely peak at higher-than-expected levels in 2023, hampering economic growth and weighing on the market risk sentiment.

Market reaction:

U.S. stocks suffered a second straight week of losses last Friday, with Dow Jones falling by 1.66% for the week, the S&P 500 dropping 2.09% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite tumbling 2.72%, as fears continued to mount that the Fed’s aggressive tightening will slip the U.S. economy into a recession.

Nasdaq Composite, 1-hour chart

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

Appetite for risky assets eased last week after hawkish signals from the Federal Reserve, Bank of England, and European Central Bank triggered concerns that rising interest rates, a sharp increase in borrowing costs, and persistently high inflation could spark an economic slowdown or a recession in 2023.

The three central banks delivered a smaller 50-basis point rate hike last week, flagging more increases to come, and projecting that interest rates would likely peak at higher-than-expected levels in 2023, hampering economic growth and weighing on the market risk sentiment.

Market reaction:

U.S. stocks suffered a second straight week of losses last Friday, with Dow Jones falling by 1.66% for the week, the S&P 500 dropping 2.09% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite tumbling 2.72%, as fears continued to mount that the Fed’s aggressive tightening will slip the U.S. economy into a recession.

Nasdaq Composite, 1-hour chart

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

Financial markets extended losses last week as investors were concerned over the hawkish stance and the aggressive policy tightening by major central banks despite growing recession worries, at a time an unprecedented spike in COVID-19 cases in China increases fears for a delayed reopening in the country.

Appetite for risky assets eased last week after hawkish signals from the Federal Reserve, Bank of England, and European Central Bank triggered concerns that rising interest rates, a sharp increase in borrowing costs, and persistently high inflation could spark an economic slowdown or a recession in 2023.

The three central banks delivered a smaller 50-basis point rate hike last week, flagging more increases to come, and projecting that interest rates would likely peak at higher-than-expected levels in 2023, hampering economic growth and weighing on the market risk sentiment.

Market reaction:

U.S. stocks suffered a second straight week of losses last Friday, with Dow Jones falling by 1.66% for the week, the S&P 500 dropping 2.09% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite tumbling 2.72%, as fears continued to mount that the Fed’s aggressive tightening will slip the U.S. economy into a recession.

Nasdaq Composite, 1-hour chart

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

Financial markets extended losses last week as investors were concerned over the hawkish stance and the aggressive policy tightening by major central banks despite growing recession worries, at a time an unprecedented spike in COVID-19 cases in China increases fears for a delayed reopening in the country.

Appetite for risky assets eased last week after hawkish signals from the Federal Reserve, Bank of England, and European Central Bank triggered concerns that rising interest rates, a sharp increase in borrowing costs, and persistently high inflation could spark an economic slowdown or a recession in 2023.

The three central banks delivered a smaller 50-basis point rate hike last week, flagging more increases to come, and projecting that interest rates would likely peak at higher-than-expected levels in 2023, hampering economic growth and weighing on the market risk sentiment.

Market reaction:

U.S. stocks suffered a second straight week of losses last Friday, with Dow Jones falling by 1.66% for the week, the S&P 500 dropping 2.09% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite tumbling 2.72%, as fears continued to mount that the Fed’s aggressive tightening will slip the U.S. economy into a recession.

Nasdaq Composite, 1-hour chart

Asian-Pacific markets ended the first day of the week that is leading up to the Christmas holidays in red, with Chinese stocks leading the losses by nearly 1% on worries over the rising Covid-19 in the country after it scaled back several strict lockdown measures earlier in December.

However, as we got into European Monday’s trading, market sentiment improved as the fears for the rate hike outlook were offset by the falling dollar and bond yields, with Euro climbing back to $1,0650 a dollar, and the U.S. stock futures turning positive by 0,50%.

Both Brent and WTI crude oil prices added another 1% this morning to $80/b and $75/b respectively, extending last week’s gains of 3% on a supply disruption of the pipeline (with 620k bpd capacity ) that connects Canadian crude producers to U.S. refiners, on China’s reopening optimism, and after the news by the U.S. Energy Department on Friday that it will begin repurchasing crude oil for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

Financial markets sink on risk-off mood as Fed, BoE, and ECB hike rates

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

The money market forecasts at least two 25 bps rate hikes next year and borrowing costs to peak at about 4.9% by midyear, before falling to around 4.4% by the end of 2023.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

The money market forecasts at least two 25 bps rate hikes next year and borrowing costs to peak at about 4.9% by midyear, before falling to around 4.4% by the end of 2023.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Chair Jerome Powell reiterated Fed’s hawkish stance by warning that recent signs of moderating inflation were not enough to convince policymakers the battle against rising prices had been won, given that inflation is still running well above the central bank’s target range (CPI 7,1% in November).

The money market forecasts at least two 25 bps rate hikes next year and borrowing costs to peak at about 4.9% by midyear, before falling to around 4.4% by the end of 2023.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Chair Jerome Powell reiterated Fed’s hawkish stance by warning that recent signs of moderating inflation were not enough to convince policymakers the battle against rising prices had been won, given that inflation is still running well above the central bank’s target range (CPI 7,1% in November).

The money market forecasts at least two 25 bps rate hikes next year and borrowing costs to peak at about 4.9% by midyear, before falling to around 4.4% by the end of 2023.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Interest rate hike path by Federal Reserve

Chair Jerome Powell reiterated Fed’s hawkish stance by warning that recent signs of moderating inflation were not enough to convince policymakers the battle against rising prices had been won, given that inflation is still running well above the central bank’s target range (CPI 7,1% in November).

The money market forecasts at least two 25 bps rate hikes next year and borrowing costs to peak at about 4.9% by midyear, before falling to around 4.4% by the end of 2023.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

ImageSo

Interest rate hike path by Federal Reserve

Chair Jerome Powell reiterated Fed’s hawkish stance by warning that recent signs of moderating inflation were not enough to convince policymakers the battle against rising prices had been won, given that inflation is still running well above the central bank’s target range (CPI 7,1% in November).

The money market forecasts at least two 25 bps rate hikes next year and borrowing costs to peak at about 4.9% by midyear, before falling to around 4.4% by the end of 2023.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

ImageSo

Interest rate hike path by Federal Reserve

Chair Jerome Powell reiterated Fed’s hawkish stance by warning that recent signs of moderating inflation were not enough to convince policymakers the battle against rising prices had been won, given that inflation is still running well above the central bank’s target range (CPI 7,1% in November).

The money market forecasts at least two 25 bps rate hikes next year and borrowing costs to peak at about 4.9% by midyear, before falling to around 4.4% by the end of 2023.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

On Wednesday, Federal Reserve announced an interest-rate increase of 0.5 bps to a 4,50-4,75% range, downsizing from the consecutive 75 bps hikes at its prior four meetings, projecting continued rate hikes to above 5% in 2023, a level not seen since a steep economic downturn in 2007.

ImageSo

Interest rate hike path by Federal Reserve

Chair Jerome Powell reiterated Fed’s hawkish stance by warning that recent signs of moderating inflation were not enough to convince policymakers the battle against rising prices had been won, given that inflation is still running well above the central bank’s target range (CPI 7,1% in November).

The money market forecasts at least two 25 bps rate hikes next year and borrowing costs to peak at about 4.9% by midyear, before falling to around 4.4% by the end of 2023.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

On Wednesday, Federal Reserve announced an interest-rate increase of 0.5 bps to a 4,50-4,75% range, downsizing from the consecutive 75 bps hikes at its prior four meetings, projecting continued rate hikes to above 5% in 2023, a level not seen since a steep economic downturn in 2007.

ImageSo

Interest rate hike path by Federal Reserve

Chair Jerome Powell reiterated Fed’s hawkish stance by warning that recent signs of moderating inflation were not enough to convince policymakers the battle against rising prices had been won, given that inflation is still running well above the central bank’s target range (CPI 7,1% in November).

The money market forecasts at least two 25 bps rate hikes next year and borrowing costs to peak at about 4.9% by midyear, before falling to around 4.4% by the end of 2023.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Interest rate hikes by FED, BoE, and ECB:

On Wednesday, Federal Reserve announced an interest-rate increase of 0.5 bps to a 4,50-4,75% range, downsizing from the consecutive 75 bps hikes at its prior four meetings, projecting continued rate hikes to above 5% in 2023, a level not seen since a steep economic downturn in 2007.

ImageSo

Interest rate hike path by Federal Reserve

Chair Jerome Powell reiterated Fed’s hawkish stance by warning that recent signs of moderating inflation were not enough to convince policymakers the battle against rising prices had been won, given that inflation is still running well above the central bank’s target range (CPI 7,1% in November).

The money market forecasts at least two 25 bps rate hikes next year and borrowing costs to peak at about 4.9% by midyear, before falling to around 4.4% by the end of 2023.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Interest rate hikes by FED, BoE, and ECB:

On Wednesday, Federal Reserve announced an interest-rate increase of 0.5 bps to a 4,50-4,75% range, downsizing from the consecutive 75 bps hikes at its prior four meetings, projecting continued rate hikes to above 5% in 2023, a level not seen since a steep economic downturn in 2007.

ImageSo

Interest rate hike path by Federal Reserve

Chair Jerome Powell reiterated Fed’s hawkish stance by warning that recent signs of moderating inflation were not enough to convince policymakers the battle against rising prices had been won, given that inflation is still running well above the central bank’s target range (CPI 7,1% in November).

The money market forecasts at least two 25 bps rate hikes next year and borrowing costs to peak at about 4.9% by midyear, before falling to around 4.4% by the end of 2023.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Financial markets sank on Thursday after three of the major global central banks, the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England, and the European Central Bank hiked interest rates by 50 basis points and signaled that rates were far from peaking and that they would tighten policy further in 2023 to bring inflation down to near 2% target.

Interest rate hikes by FED, BoE, and ECB:

On Wednesday, Federal Reserve announced an interest-rate increase of 0.5 bps to a 4,50-4,75% range, downsizing from the consecutive 75 bps hikes at its prior four meetings, projecting continued rate hikes to above 5% in 2023, a level not seen since a steep economic downturn in 2007.

ImageSo

Interest rate hike path by Federal Reserve

Chair Jerome Powell reiterated Fed’s hawkish stance by warning that recent signs of moderating inflation were not enough to convince policymakers the battle against rising prices had been won, given that inflation is still running well above the central bank’s target range (CPI 7,1% in November).

The money market forecasts at least two 25 bps rate hikes next year and borrowing costs to peak at about 4.9% by midyear, before falling to around 4.4% by the end of 2023.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.

Financial markets sank on Thursday after three of the major global central banks, the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England, and the European Central Bank hiked interest rates by 50 basis points and signaled that rates were far from peaking and that they would tighten policy further in 2023 to bring inflation down to near 2% target.

Interest rate hikes by FED, BoE, and ECB:

On Wednesday, Federal Reserve announced an interest-rate increase of 0.5 bps to a 4,50-4,75% range, downsizing from the consecutive 75 bps hikes at its prior four meetings, projecting continued rate hikes to above 5% in 2023, a level not seen since a steep economic downturn in 2007.

ImageSo

Interest rate hike path by Federal Reserve

Chair Jerome Powell reiterated Fed’s hawkish stance by warning that recent signs of moderating inflation were not enough to convince policymakers the battle against rising prices had been won, given that inflation is still running well above the central bank’s target range (CPI 7,1% in November).

The money market forecasts at least two 25 bps rate hikes next year and borrowing costs to peak at about 4.9% by midyear, before falling to around 4.4% by the end of 2023.

Following the hawkish footsteps of Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points as expected on Thursday, indicating an extended hiking cycle next year to contain record-high increases in inflation.

The ECB’s deposit rate now stands at 2%, while the borrowing cost for its prim refinancing operations and marginal lending facility increase to 2.50% and 2.75%, respectively.

The Bank of England raised its key interest by 50 basis points to a new 14-year high of 3.50%, following an unprecedented 75 basis point hike in November.

Money markets are predicting BoE’s hike rates up to 4,50% by August 2023 to bring down the 10,7% inflation rate in November to the 2% inflation target.

Recession concerns grow among investors:

What removed the risk appetite from markets yesterday wasn’t the well-expected rate increase by 50bps, but the hawkish stance from the central bank officials on both sides of the Atlantic after raising their estimates of how high rates may ultimately have to go to tame inflation, which ramped up fears of a potential recession.

Economists and investors are concerned that the aggressive rate-hiking campaigns by the major central banks will push the global economy into a recession.

The policymakers have also warned that the global market might see an economic activity contract in both the fourth quarter of this year and the first three months of 2023, due to tighter financing conditions, the energy crisis, high uncertainty, and a weakening outlook for the global economy.

Market reaction:

Equity markets reversed early week gains on Thursday as hopes that the recent moderating inflation pressures thanks to lower energy and food costs and some resilient macroeconomic data (wages growth+ jobs data) could allow central bank officials to slow rate rises eased.

The hawkish Fed stance and a much worse-than-expected November retail sales report weighed on U.S. equities, with Dow Jones losing more than 700 points or down 2,25%, the S&P 500 settled down 2,50%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was hit even harder falling around 3.2%.

All three U.S. major indices have gained more than 15% since bottoming in early October, as the recent signs of moderating inflation sparked optimism that the end of the Fed’s rate hike path could be on the horizon. But the rally has fizzled in December as investors see mixed economic data and a resolute Fed as having increased the chances of a recession.

The hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England boosted the euro and the pound to near six-month highs of $1,07 and $1,23 against t dollar respectively, while the DXY-U.S. dollar index hit a fresh multi-month low of 103,50 on Wednesday before rebounding to near 104,50 a day later.