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Investing.com -- Fed chief Jerome Powell starts his congressional testimony later in the session, after data showed that U.K. inflation remained elevated in May. Tesla is looking towards India for investment, while FedEx disappoints with its earnings.
1. Powell starts congressional testimony
Federal Reserve chief Jerome Powell starts his two-day congressional testimony later Wednesday, addressing the House Financial Services Committee just a week after the U.S. central bank paused rate increases but signaled it could raise rates again this year.
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The Fed projected that the benchmark rate could reach 5.6% by the end of the year, which would imply at least two increases of 25 basis points.
With this in mind, investors will be looking to see how strongly Powell stresses the need to resume rate hikes and whether they will restart as quickly as next month.
"The focus is on whether the July meeting is truly ‘live’ and if the Fed dot plot of two more hikes is a true base case depending on the data, or doom-mongering on inflation in an effort to ensure no premature easing in financial conditions," said Tapas Strickland, head of market economics at NAB.
2. U.K. inflation remains elevated
U.K. inflation surprised on the upside earlier Wednesday, as headline CPI rose 8.7% in May, the same as the month before, and above the expected 8.4%.
Additionally, core inflation, which excludes food and energy, accelerated unexpectedly to 7.1% from 6.8%, heaping pressure on the Bank of England to ratchet up its interest rate hikes when it meets on Thursday.
The BOE is expected to raise rates by 25 basis points to 4.75%, though this inflation data increases the risk of a half-point increase as the central bank continues its quickest tightening cycle in 40 years.
Adding to the country’s woes, a separate report showed that U.K. government debt climbed above 100% of GDP for the first time since 1961 after the government borrowed a greater-than-forecast £20 billion (£1 = $1.2708) in May.
3. Futures flat; FedEx stock weakens
U.S. futures traded largely unchanged Wednesday, with investors awaiting testimony from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell [see above] for some insights on what lies ahead for interest rates.
At 05:00 ET (09:00 GMT), the Dow futures contract had dropped just 3 points or less than 0.1%, S&P 500 futures traded flat, and Nasdaq 100 futures dropped 6 points or 0.1%.
The main indices closed lower Tuesday as investors took money off the table in the wake of last week’s strong gains after the Fed paused its prolonged rate-hiking cycle.