The S&P 500 ended an indecisive session with a nominal increase and Treasury yields edged up on Wednesday as a spate of economic data appeared to support Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell's reassertion, in his second day of congressional testimony, that the central bank would continue to ratchet up policy rates until inflation subsides.

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The major U.S. stock indexes oscillated between modest gains and losses throughout the day, with the Nasdaq joining the S&P 500 in positive territory at the closing bell and the Dow posting a modest loss.

Shorter-dated Treasury yields rose and the dollar paused its advance.

In his second day on Capitol Hill, Powell repeated his hawkish message that key interest rates could be raised faster than previously anticipated, but he stressed the central bank's policy decisions remain data dependent.

"Yesterday the Fed opened the door to more interest rate increases and did not close it today," said David Carter, managing director at JPMorgan Private Bank in New York. "There’s lots of uncertainty as to when the rate increase journey will end; even in a marathon you know it's over in 26.2 miles, but nobody knows where this finish line is, or if there is one more long hill."

Data released on Wednesday painted a picture of U.S. economic hardiness and did very little to assuage those fears.

Job openings remain elevated, private payrolls beat consenus estimates and demand for home loans increased despite the ongoing upward trajectory of mortgage rates.

"If future increases are based on the economic data, the economic data continues to paint an unclear picture, which suggests the path of future rate increases is also unclear," Carter added.

Robust economic data could embolden the central bank to keep the Fed funds target rate higher for longer.

Financial markets have priced in a 77.9% likelihood of a 50 basis point hike to the key interest rate at the conclusion of the Fed's March meeting, up from about 30% at the beginning of the week, according to CME's FedWatch tool. 

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