(Reflects U.S. market close)
* Wall Street ends higher after Fed minutes
* Dollar hits two-decade high vs euro
* Oil continues slide after Tuesday selloff
WASHINGTON, July 6 (Reuters) - Wall Street ticked upward
while oil continued to slide on Wednesday as investors juggled
concerns over inflation versus a recession after Federal Reserve
minutes showed officials rallied around a large rate hike at
their June meeting.
All three major stock indices ended higher after the release
of the Fed minutes, which showed officials agreeing that the
inflation outlook had deteriorated and expressing concern over
lost faith in the Fed's ability to stem it. The Fed at that
meeting hiked rates by 0.75% for the first time since 1994.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.22%, the
S&P 500 climbed 0.36% and the Nasdaq Composite
was up 0.35%.
The MSCI world equity index, which tracks
shares in 45 nations, was up 0.14%.
Oil struggled to stay above $100 a barrel, dropping to a
12-week low on recession fears earlier in the trading day. In
the afternoon, Brent crude ended down 2.3% at $100.40 a
barrel. That comes one day after Brent fell 9% on supply
concerns.
New economic data out on Wednesday showed U.S. job openings
had fallen less than expected in May, suggesting the labor
market remained tight and undercutting the notion that a
recession was necessarily on its way.
If anything, the survey from the Institute for Supply
Management (ISM) suggested the Fed may have to keep up its
efforts to cool the economy and bring prices under control via
rate hikes. Also on Wednesday, the U.S. Labor Department
reported 11.3 million job openings at the end of May, down
slightly from March's record high.
"Investors continue the tug of war between, 'Should I be
more worried about high inflation or the quickly deteriorating
growth outlook?'" said Thomas Kennedy, chief investment
strategist for J.P. Morgan Global Wealth Management. "Cross
asset correlations over the last few weeks have suggested growth
is the bigger worry for the market now."
Energy concerns continued to push the dollar, perceived as a
safe haven, ahead of other currencies.
The dollar index, which tracks the U.S. unit versus a
basket of six currencies, surged above 107, while the euro
dropped below $1.02, the first time both currencies reached
those levels since December 2002.
Benchmark U.S. Treasury yields fell to five-week lows on
Wednesday, while key parts of the yield curve remained inverted,
sounding recession alarm bells.
The two-year, 10-year part of the Treasury yield curve
reached minus 4 basis points, after inverting on Tuesday for the
first time in three weeks, a move seen as a reliable indicator
that a recession will follow in one to two years.
The two-year, five-year section, which on Tuesday inverted
for the first time since February 2020, also stayed inverted.
Benchmark 10-year yields were last at 2.913%. They have
fallen from 3.498% on June 14, the highest since April 2011.
"The probability of a soft landing had massively declined,"
August Hatecke, the co-head of UBS Wealth Management Asia
Pacific, told investors at a conference in Singapore.
(Additional reporting Sam Byford in Tokyo and Tom Westbrook in
Singapore; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama , Will Dunham and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)