NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 A powerful rally across Wall Street sent the Dow Jones Industrial Average to a record on Wednesday after that the cuts to interest rates investors crave so much may be coming next year.
The Dow jumped 512 points, or 1.4%, to top 37,000 and surpass its prior peak of 36,799.65 set at the start of last year.
Other, more widely followed indexes of U.S. stocks also leaped. The S&P 500 rose 1.4% and is within 1.9% of its own record. The Nasdaq composite gained 1.4%.
Wall Street loves lower interest rates because they can relax the pressure on the economy and goose prices for all kinds of investments, from stocks to bonds to cryptocurrencies. Markets have been rallying since October on rising hopes that cuts may be on the way.
Rate cuts particularly help investments seen as expensive, lower quality or forcing their investors to wait the longest for big growth. Some of Wednesday鈥檚 bigger winners were bitcoin, which rose nearly 4%, and the Russell 2000 index of small U.S. stocks, which jumped 3.5%.
All the excitement came as the Federal Reserve on Wednesday held its main interest rate steady at a range of 5.25% to 5.50%, as was widely expected. It鈥檚 hiked that rate up from virtually zero early last year in hopes of slowing the economy and hurting investment prices by exactly the right amount: enough to snuff out high inflation but not so much that it causes a painful recession.
With inflation down sharply from its peak two summers ago and the economy still solid despite high interest rates, hopes have been rising that the Fed can pull off that perfect landing. And in a press conference Wednesday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said its main interest rate is likely already at or near its peak.
While acknowledging that the battle against high inflation is still not definitively over, he also said Fed officials don鈥檛 want to wait too long before cutting the federal funds rate, which is at its highest level since 2001.
鈥淲e鈥檙e aware of the risk that we would hang on too long鈥 before cutting rates, he said. 鈥淲e know that鈥檚 a risk, and we鈥檙e very focused on not making that mistake.鈥
That鈥檚 why Wall Street鈥檚 focus was squarely on the projections that the Fed released showing where policy makers see the federal funds rate ending 2024. They showed the median official expects it to be at roughly 4.6%.
While that implies a less steep cut than many traders on Wall Street had been expecting, it鈥檚 more than the median Fed official was predicting three months ago.
Following the release of the projections, traders on Wall Street upped their bets for rate cuts in 2024. A majority of bets now expect the federal funds rate to end next year at a range of 3.75% to 4%, according to data from CME Group.
Treasury yields tumbled in the bond market on such bets. The yield on the 10-year Treasury dropped to 4.02% from 4.21% late Tuesday. The two-year yield, which moves more on expectations for the Fed, sank to 4.43% from 4.73%.
They both had already been down earlier in the morning, after a report showed that were just 0.9% higher in November than a year earlier. That was softer than economists expected and the second-lowest such reading since inflation began exploding in early 2021.
On Wall Street, Vertex Pharmaceuticals jumped 13.2% for the biggest gain in the S&P 500 after it reported encouraging data from a study for a potential pain treatment for patients with diabetic peripheral neuropathy.
That helped offset a 6.7% loss for Pfizer, which that was weaker than analysts expected. Much of the shortfall was due to expectations for its COVID-19 vaccine and treatment.
Southwest Airlines lost 3.8% after it raised its forecast for how much it will spend on fuel costs during the end of 2023.
All told, the S&P 500 rose 63.39 points to 4,707.09. The Dow added 512.30 to 37,090.24, and the Nasdaq gained 200.57 to 14,733.96.
In stock markets abroad, indexes were mixed in Europe and Asia.
Japan鈥檚 Nikkei 225 rose 0.3% after a report from the Bank of Japan showed business sentiment among major manufacturers improved.
Stocks fell more sharply elsewhere in Asia, including a 1.2% drop in Shanghai and a 0.9% decline in Hong Kong, as worries continue about the , the world鈥檚 second-largest.
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AP Business Writers Matt Ott and Elaine Kurtenbach contributed.
Stan Choe, The Associated Press