News

Fed meeting is a key economic event, with Wall Street keyed into what Fed Chair Powell & Co. have to say about interest rates ...
The Federal Reserve won't lower interest rates ... a coming recession. Fed Chair Jerome Powell on Friday said the U.S. central bank is in no rush to cut rates, with the labor market still ...
Economists are broadly expecting the Federal Reserve to stand pat on interest rates at its upcoming meeting, but how the ...
The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady on Wednesday amid fears that President Trump's tariffs will rekindle inflation and slow economic growth. The decision to keep the Fed's benchmark ...
Prior to Wednesday’s meeting, analysts largely expected the Fed to hold off on interest rates for at least the next few months as trade war tensions threaten to reheat inflation. Fed Chair ...
The Fed may be forced to bail out the economy by lowering interest rates if President Donald Trump's tariffs tank the job market. The central bank could also decide to keep interest rates higher ...
But another very useful piece of information will be released Wednesday: the Fed's "dot plot" forecast for where it sees interest rates headed in the coming year. We only get this behind-the ...
The traders' bets are now predicting there's little chance the Fed will lower interest rates at the end of the next meeting on June 18. That means Americans won't see short-term interest rates ...
It’s not going to be that in June we’re going to understand what’s happening here, or in July,” the NY Fed chief said Monday.
The next Fed meeting to discuss interest rates isn't until May. Trump looks forward to Powell's "termination" after Fed chairman warns of inflation as price changes occur due to tariffs.
Policymakers should aim to anchor not only longer-term estimates of future consumer price increases, but “the whole curve”, says Federal Reserve Bank of New York President John Williams.