Fed rate cuts, Treasury yields, small caps: Market Takeaways

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Major stock market indexes (^DJI, ^IXIC, ^GSPC) pulled back Wednesday, the sell-off fueled by March's Consumer Price Index (CPI) print as the Federal Reserve goes back and forth over how many interest rate cuts will be realistic in 2024.

Yahoo Finance Markets Reporter Josh Schafer joins Market Domination Overtime to talk about Wednesday's market-moving themes, particularly for Treasury yields (^DJI, ^IXIC, ^GSPC) and Russell 2000 small-cap stocks (^RUT).

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Market Domination Overtime.

This post was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

JOSH LIPTON: Josh Schafer is here with takeaways from the day. Joshua.

JOSH SCHAFER: Yeah, Josh. I mean, the big takeaway is the fact that we now have markets pricing out, one of the interest rate cuts that we had been expecting, right? So data from Bloomberg showing that pricing now in the markets has us at two rate cuts this year. That's down from three.

That's down from what was close to almost 7 at the beginning of January. So a very significant move. Perhaps notable as Julie was just pointing out when we were at the market close there.

We haven't seen a massive move downward in the S&P 500 amid that. And I think we can get into that a little bit as sort of why. But that's the big takeaway from this inflation reading is we're really starting to ratchet back our expectations for how many Fed rate cuts we're going to get this year. And now, I think the broader question for investors is just how much does it matter?

JULIE HYMAN: Well, it didn't matter that much to stocks today. It mattered some, right? We saw a sell off. But it wasn't a huge sell off. It mattered could argue a lot more for the Treasury market.

JOSH SCHAFER: It definitely did. We saw the Treasury market 10-year yield spiking 20 basis points at one point in the afternoon. I think it closed a little bit below that point that we had seen. But it was up to about 4.57.

Pretty massive move. It was interesting Wells Fargo's, Chris Harvey was on this morning. And he was talking about how the momentum market that we've talked about a lot in stocks. That applies to treasuries, too.

And when you see, you can have these big gaps filled. We talk about a gap fill maybe after earnings. And you see the candlestick go way up in a stock.

He said, you can see something similar in treasuries, too. And he expects that to happen. He noted, though, remember Chris Harvey is the one who came out yesterday and said-- or Monday and said 5535 for the S&P 500.