Charlie Munger dies, dovish Fed comments fuel pivot bets - what's moving markets

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Investing.com -- Berkshire Hathaway Vice Chairman Charlie Munger passes away at 99, leaving behind a legacy burnished by a brilliant business career and a fruitful partnership with investment icon Warren Buffett. Elsewhere on Wednesday, U.S. futures push higher after stocks rose in the prior session following dovish comments from a top Federal Reserve official.

1. Charlie Munger dies at 99

Charlie Munger, a superlative investor and billionaire vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKa), died on Tuesday at a California hospital. He was 99.

Known as the right-hand man of Berkshire's head Warren Buffett, Munger often sparred with him over investment strategies. Munger's tactic of snapping up stakes in solid companies with strong potential future cash flows contrasted with Buffett's plan to buy up mediocre firms cheaply.

Buffett has written that he was eventually persuaded by Munger to ditch what he called "cigar-butt" bets. Buffett called himself a "slow learner." Together, the men worked to turn Berkshire from a rundown textile manufacturer into an investment empire worth almost $800 billion.

But Munger, a lawyer by training, was also a stellar investor in his own right. Prior to joining Berkshire's board, Munger founded a separate partnership in 1962 that posted average annual gains of just over 24% - far outpacing returns from the S&P 500.

2. U.S. futures edge higher

U.S. stock futures ticked into the green on Wednesday after dovish comments from Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller fueled a rise in equities on Wall Street in the prior session.

By 04:57 ET (09:57 GMT), the Dow futures contract had gained 97 points or 0.3%, S&P 500 futures had added 14 points or 0.3%, and Nasdaq 100 futures inched higher by 63 points or 0.4%.

On Tuesday, the main indices climbed by 0.1% or more, resuming a November rally that had temporarily paused at the beginning of the trading week. The 30-stock Dow Jones Industrial Average is on pace to end the penultimate month of the year up by 7.2%, while the benchmark S&P 500 and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite have jumped by 8.6% and 11.1%, respectively.

Giving additional support to stocks were U.S. Treasury yields and the dollar index, which both slipped to their lowest levels since August on Tuesday following Waller's statements (see below).

3. Fed's Waller points to policy pivot

Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller has suggested that the U.S. central bank's monetary policy is "well-positioned" to cool inflation.

In an address to a think tank on Tuesday, Waller, normally known as a hawkish voice at the Fed, said the rate of price growth seems to be "moving along pretty much like I thought." In October, headline inflation in the U.S. slowed by more than anticipated to 3.2%, due in large part to a decline in gas costs.