NEW YORK, Feb 16 ― Wall Street's three major indexes closed higher yesterday and the dollar rose along with US Treasury yields after US retail sales data for January rose by the most in nearly two years, suggesting a resilient economy while fuelling concerns about further interest rate hikes.

After two straight monthly declines, the Commerce Department said retail sales surged 3.0 per cent last month, the largest increase since March 2021, after declining by an unrevised 1.1 per cent in December.

Paired with Tuesday's data showing a monthly inflation pick-up in January, evidence of an increase in consumer spending fed worries the US Federal Reserve would keep increasing rates for longer than some investors had hoped.

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“It's all about the Fed. As figures like retail sales come out quite strong, this is more food for the Fed to keep raising rates, maybe at reduced pace, but, at the very least, to keep them higher for longer,” said Bruce Zaro, managing director at Granite Wealth Management.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 38.78 points, or 0.11 per cent, to 34,128.05, the S&P 500 gained 11.47 points, or 0.28 per cent, to 4,147.6 and the Nasdaq Composite added 110.45 points, or 0.92 per cent, to 12,070.59.

MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe gained 0.04 per cent but has risen almost 8 per cent so far this year.

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Some investors were doubtful the gains can continue.

“It gets very difficult to justify further upside because we’re looking at earnings estimates still coming down and I also don’t think we’re out of the woods with the recession risk. I think a lot of the strength is transitory,” said Jimmy Chang, chief investment officer at Rockefeller Global Family Office.

The dollar index hit its highest level since January 6 after the strong US retail sales and inflation data.

The index, which measures the greenback against a basket of major currencies, was recently up 0.562 per cent, after rising as much as 0.86 per cent. The euro was down 0.42 per cent at US$1.069 (RM4.69).

The Japanese yen weakened 0.77 per cent versus the greenback to 134.14 per dollar, while Sterling GBP= was last trading at US$1.2035, down 1.11 per cent on the day.

In US Treasuries, benchmark 10-year notes were up 3.8 basis points to 3.799 per cent, from 3.761 per cent late on Tuesday. The 30-year bond was last up 3.2 basis points to yield 3.8329 per cent, from 3.801 per cent. The 2-year note was last was down 0.2 basis points to yield 4.6203 per cent, from 4.622 per cent.

“The Fed's been very clear that they believe they have a ways to go with rates, and that it would be data-dependent,” said Michael Lorizio, senior fixed income trader at Manulife Investment Management.

“As the data has evolved, now the market is coming back towards the Fed's predications, because the data has been supportive of that,” he added.

Oil prices finished lower but bounced off session lows as traders discounted a build in US crude stocks due to a data adjustment, while forecasts for higher global demand were supportive.

US crude settled down 0.59 per cent at US$78.59 per barrel and Brent finished at US$85.38, down 0.23 per cent on the day.

Gold prices hit their lowest since early January with pressure from the stronger dollar and strong US data.

Spot gold dropped 0.9 per cent to US$1,838.12 an ounce. US gold futures fell 0.91 per cent to US$1,837.10 an ounce. ― Reuters