US stocks fall broadly as global central banks raise rates

All three main indexes on Wall Street tumbled Wednesday (Shutterstock)
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Updated 22 September 2022
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US stocks fall broadly as global central banks raise rates

LONDON: Stocks fell on Wall Street in morning trading on Thursday and added to weekly losses for major indexes as central banks around the world hiked interest rates to fight inflation, according to AP.

The S&P 500 fell 0.6 percent as of 10:19 a.m. Eastern. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 98 points, or 0.3 percent, to 30,086 and the Nasdaq fell 1 percent. Every major index is solidly on track for weekly losses.

The losses were broad and led by retailers, technology stocks and industrial companies.

Starbucks fell 3.4 percent and Apple fell 1.2 percent. Energy stocks gained ground as US crude oil prices rose 3.4 percent. Valero Energy rose 1.4 percent.

Bond yields rose. The yield on the 2-year Treasury, which tends to follow expectations for Fed action, rose significantly to 4.12 percent from 4.02 percent late Wednesday. It is trading at its highest level since 2007.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury, which influences mortgage rates, jumped to 3.65 percent from 3.51 percent from late Wednesday.

Central banks in Europe and Asia raised interests a day after the Federal Reserve made another big rate hike and signaled that more were on the way.

Britain’s central bank raised its key interest rate by another half-percentage point.

Switzerland’s central bank raised its benchmark lending rate by its biggest margin to date, 0.75 percentage points, and said it couldn’t rule out more hikes. Central banks in Norway and the Philippines also raised interest rates.

The Fed and other central banks are raising interest rates in to make borrowing more expensive. The goal is to slow economic growth enough to tame inflation, but not so much that economies slip into a recession.

Wall Street is worried that the Fed may be pumping the brakes too hard on an already slowing economy, which makes steering into a recession more likely.

On Wednesday, Fed chair Jerome Powell stressed his resolve to lift rates high enough to drive inflation back toward the central bank’s 2 percent goal. Powell said the Fed has just started to get to that level with this most recent increase.

The US central bank lifted its benchmark rate, which affects many consumer and business loans, to a range of 3 percent to 3.25 percent. That is the fifth rate hike this year and up from zero at the start of the year.

The Fed also released a forecast known as a “dot plot” that showed it expects its benchmark rate to be 4.4 percent by year’s end, a full point higher than envisioned in June.


US allows countries to buy Russian oil stranded at sea for 30 days

Updated 13 March 2026
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US allows countries to buy Russian oil stranded at sea for 30 days

  • US issues 30-day license for stranded Russian oil purchases
  • Measure the latest by Trump administration to calm energy markets jolted by Iran war

The United States issued ​a 30-day license for countries to buy Russian oil and petroleum products currently stranded at sea in what Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said was a step to stabilize global energy markets roiled by the Iran war.
The announcement comes a day after the US Energy Department said that the US would be releasing 172 million barrels of oil from the strategic petroleum reserve in an effort to curb sky-rocketing oil prices in the wake of the war in Iran. That release was part of a broader commitment by the 32-nation International Energy Agency to release 400 million barrels of oil. The agency said earlier on Thursday that he war in the Middle East ‌was creating the ‌biggest oil supply disruption in history. Bessent, in a statement on X ​released ‌hours ⁠after benchmark ​oil prices ⁠shot above $100 a barrel, said the measure was “narrowly tailored” and “short-term” and would not provide significant financial benefit to the Russian government.
“The temporary increase in oil prices is a short-term and temporary disruption that will result in a massive benefit to our nation and economy in the long-term,” Bessent said in the statement, echoing President Donald Trump.
Thursday’s license, which authorizes the delivery and sale of Russian crude oil and petroleum products loaded on vessels as of March 12, will remain valid through midnight Washington time on April 11, according to the text of the license posted on ⁠the Treasury Department’s website. The US Treasury previously issued a 30-day waiver on March ‌5 specifically for India, allowing New Delhi to buy Russian oil stuck ‌at sea. Among other measures to tame energy prices, Trump has already ordered ​the US International Development Finance Corporation to provide political ‌risk insurance and financial guarantees for maritime trade in the Gulf and said the US Navy ‌could escort ships in the region. In another attempt to control prices, the Trump administration is considering temporarily waiving a shipping rule known as the Jones Act to ensure energy and agricultural products can move freely between US ports, the White House said. Waiving the rule would allow foreign ships to carry fuel between US ports, potentially lowering costs and speeding deliveries.
“The president ‌is taking every action he can to lower prices ... unsanctioned oil that’s at sea to get that into the market, continuing to push our own ⁠producers to drill and ⁠expand production as fast and as far as they can, providing regulatory relief, and you’re going to see more and more in the days to come,” White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller told Fox News’ “Primetime” program on Thursday.
There were about 124 million barrels of Russian-origin oil on water across 30 different locations globally as of Thursday, Fox News reported, adding that the US license would provide around five to six days of supply when taking into account the daily loss of oil from the Strait. Trump said earlier on Thursday the United States stood to make significant money from oil prices driven higher by the war, prompting criticism from some lawmakers who accused him of caring only about rich people.
US and Israeli strikes on Iran and the subsequent response by Tehran have widened regional tensions and paralyzed shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, disrupting vital ​Middle East oil and gas flows and sending energy ​prices higher.
Raising the stakes for the global economy, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps says it will block oil shipments from the Gulf unless the US and Israeli attacks cease.