And while 2-year yields raced higher, 10-year Treasury equivalents barely budged ahead of Wednesday's latest auction. That means the 2-10 year yield curve inversion - often seen as a harbinger of recession - deepened to more than 100 bps for the first time in 41 years. Against that backdrop, the relative resilience of the stock market remains impressive. Although Wall St benchmarks lost more than 1% each on Tuesday, world stocks were more contained, and U.S. futures held steady. With many analysts concerned that overseas central banks may not want or be able to keep pace with another leg higher in Fed rates - as so often in previous tightening cycles - the dollar was one of the biggest winners from Powell's jolt. The DXY dollar index hit its highest level since early December last year. Sterling , the Japanese yen , China's yuan and both the Australian and Canadian dollars all hit their lowest levels of 2023. The Australian dollar took an outside hit as the Powell testimony came the same day as the Reserve Bank of Australia signalled it may soon pause its rate rise campaign. And the Bank of Canada is expected to confirm on Wednesday its previously flagged intention to do likewise. While Powell said he thought the Fed's 2% inflation target could still be met without dealing a major blow to the U.S. labor market, he acknowledged on Tuesday that "there will very likely be some softening in labor market conditions."
Powell's stance on the tight labor market will get a reality
check on Wednesday from January JOLTS data on job openings, as
well as the readout from ADP on private sector payrolls in
February - all ahead of Friday's nationwide employment report
for last month.
If January's economic "boomlet" was just a blip, as some in
the Fed and elsewhere still have an open mind about, then these
updates should reveal it.
Key developments that may provide direction to U.S. markets
later on Wednesday:
* U.S. Feb ADP private sector payrolls report, Jan U.S. trade
balance, JOLTS job openings report.
* Bank of Canada policy decision
* U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell testifies to House
Financial Services Committee. Richmond Fed President Thomas
Barkin speaks. Fed releases 'Beige Book' of current economic
conditions
* U.S. Treasury auctions 10-year notes
* U.S. corporate earnings: Campbell Soup, Brown-Forman
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U.S. yield curve inversion biggest in 41 years Odds surge for larger Fed rate hike in March Fed rates and US core inflation U.S. payroll growth remains strong ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
(By Mike Dolan, editing by Tomasz Janowski
mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com. Twitter: @reutersMikeD)