Invezz
20 Jun 2026, 11:06 UTC · 2h ago
Why a hawkish Fed isn't scaring Wall Street
NewsImpactScreener rates every claim in this story for market impact and maps it to the tickers most exposed.

Invezz
20 Jun 2026, 11:06 UTC · 2h ago
NewsImpactScreener rates every claim in this story for market impact and maps it to the tickers most exposed.

What the story claims
4 claims · each scored for market impact
Major financial institutions, including Standard Chartered, are pushing rate-cut expectations back to 2027, forecasting the Federal Funds rate to remain between 3.5% and 3.75% through 2026. — Higher-for-longer interest rates generally increase borrowing costs and pressure equity valuations, creating a headwind for risk assets.
-0.60Equities remain resilient due to strong corporate earnings, approximately 2% economic growth, and sustained AI capital expenditure. — Strong fundamental growth and AI investment offset the negative pressure of high interest rates, supporting a bullish outlook for the S&P 500.
+0.50Standard Chartered maintains an overweight rating on global equities, specifically favoring US and Asia ex-Japan stocks. — An overweight recommendation from a major institution signals institutional confidence and potential capital inflows into these specific regions.
+0.30Continue reading
6 related stories
Top 2 movers · tap to explore
The 'higher-for-longer' rate environment is expected to benefit bank net interest income and credit quality, provided the labor market remains stable. — This provides a specific fundamental tailwind for the financial sector (XLF) despite the broader hawkish Fed stance.
+0.20Free · No account
Get a free daily PDF briefing — the last 24 hours of news, with summaries and the market-impact score for each story, delivered an hour before the open.
We’ll watch
Pre-filled from this story — remove any you don’t want. Add more tickers & tags or fine-tune your watchlist anytime — every email has an edit link, no account needed.
Free forever · one email a day, max · unsubscribe in one click.How it works
How the impact breaks down
Where the story's weight lands
Stocks most exposed
Modeled from each name's sensitivity to this story

24/7 Wall Street
54m ago