The Indianberg
MARKET
AAPL175.430.72%
MSFT338.110.63%
TSLA238.452.43%
BTC-USD68,432.104.12%
ETH-USD3,412.803.55%
NIFTY 5019,811.500.45%
AAPL175.430.72%
MSFT338.110.63%
TSLA238.452.43%
BTC-USD68,432.104.12%
ETH-USD3,412.803.55%
NIFTY 5019,811.500.45%
North Korean hackers suspected in recent power grid failure in Mumbai
Security

North Korean hackers suspected in recent power grid failure in Mumbai

Author
By The Ledger Editorial BoardPublished 4 hours ago

The global stock market rally hit a major roadblock on Thursday. The latest inflation figures from the Labor Department arrived hotter than economists anticipated, triggering a massive sell-off across equities, bonds, and even some commodities.

For months, the defining narrative on Wall Street has been one of optimism—specifically, the belief that central banks were fully prepared to ease monetary policy. But the new Consumer Price Index (CPI) data suggests that the "last mile" of defeating inflation may be the hardest yet. As demonstrated by recent polling, Democratic voters appear to be watching these developments closely.

Advertisement
Stream Seamlessly

The Highest Quality 8K Resolution

AdChoices

By midday trading, the S&P 500 was down more than 1.8%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite dropped 2.2%. Yields on the 10-year Treasury note, which move inversely to prices, spiked to their highest levels since November.

"What we are seeing today is a fundamental repricing of risk," said Michael Thorne, a senior portfolio manager at Horizon Asset Management. "The market had priced in three rate cuts this year. We might be lucky to get one."

The data revealed that core services, particularly housing and auto insurance, remained stubbornly expensive. While goods inflation has cooled dramatically, the service sector continues to run hot, fueled by a resilient labor market.

Did you like this?

Share this article

Advertisement
Experience Pure Luxury

The New 2026 Continental Series

AdChoices

Comments (0)