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Wall Street is not afraid of the Federal Reserve's "hawkish interest rate cuts"; will the "Christmas rally" in the U.S. stock market arrive as scheduled?
Wall Street analysts are not overly concerned and believe that Wednesday's sell-off presents a good buying opportunity, and a strong reaction to the Federal Reserve meeting is unlikely to disrupt this year's 'Santa Claus rally' momentum.
Oracle Corp Japan: Supplementary financial results for the 2nd quarter of the fiscal year ending 2025/5 (FY25)
Oracle Corp Japan: Summary of financial results for the 2nd quarter (interim period) of the fiscal year ending 2025/5 [Japanese GAAP] (unconsolidated)
Oracle Corp Japan 1H Parent Net Y29.34B Vs Net Y26.67B
Investment bank Wedbush: The sell-off of technology stocks caused by the Federal Reserve is a "Buy opportunity."
Investment bank Wedbush Securities stated that the significant sell-off in the stock market on Wednesday, triggered by the Federal Reserve's "less dovish" stance, is merely a "buy opportunity."
The Dow barely ended its longest continuous decline in 50 years, Micron fell by 16%, the US dollar reached a two-year high again, and US bonds, oil, and Bitcoin all dropped.
U.S. stock market's other Indexes turned down towards the end, Tesla rose by nearly 4% before closing down, NVIDIA reached a high of 4%, and Micron Technology had its steepest decline in five years. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury bonds briefly increased by nearly 10 basis points approaching 4.60%, close to a seven-month high, while short-term bond yields fell, with the 2/10-year yield spread at its widest in two and a half years. The Bank of England held rates steady, but more officials supported a rate cut, leading to a decline in the British Pound. The Governor of the Bank of Japan suppressed interest rate hike expectations, causing the yen to fall towards 158, and the offshore renminbi briefly dropped below 7.32 yuan to its lowest in 15 months. Bitcoin fell by 5%, approaching $0.096 million. Spot Gold rose by 1.6% before narrowing back below $2,600, while the futures silver fell by 5%, and U.S. crude oil fell below $70.