US core CPI returns to a 40-year high year-on-year, inflation is still hot, Fed continues to violent interest rate hikes next month, there is almost no suspense, European and American stocks and bonds both plummet , and US dollar short-term pulls up.
[The following market is updated at 21:30]
On October 13, US stocks opened sharply lower, Nasdaq fell 2.8%, S&P 500 fell 2%, and the Dow Jones fell 1.6%. Semiconductor stocks ranked among the top drops, Nvidia fell about 5%, AMD fell about 4%, Micron fell about 3%, and Qualcomm fell about 3%.

[The following market is updated at 21:10]
After the US September CPI data was released, US stock futures plunged. As of press time, Nasdaq futures fell by 3%, S&P 500 futures fell by more than 2%, and Dow futures fell by 1.8%.


In addition, the decline of large-scale technology stocks in the United States expanded before the market, Nvidia fell 4.4%, Amazon and Tesla fell about 4%, Netflix fell 3.4%, and Alphabet and Apple fell nearly 3%.
US 10-year Treasury bond yield short-term up 17 basis points, while US 2-year and 3-year Treasury bond yields rose by 20 basis points in the day.


U.S. 30-year Treasury yield rose about 15 basis points to 3.98%, the highest since August 2011.

European stock markets fell sharply, with the European Stoke 50 falling nearly 2%, with the French CAC 40, the UK FTSE 100, and the German DAX 30 all falling more than 1%.

European bond markets plunged collectively. Since the United States released the CPI data, the yield on Germany's 10-year treasury bonds once rose by 15 basis points, and the yield on France's 10-year treasury bonds rose by 10 basis points.

USD index pulls up in the short term and is now at 113.62, close to the historical high level. Under the strong strength of

, the Japanese yen fell to 147.67 against the US dollar, the lowest level since 1990.

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