Stories Tagged as
FOMC
Fed expected to leave benchmark rate unchanged at June meeting. Is that risky?
Jun 10, 2024
The latest jobs report is unlikely to change the Fed's mind when they meet Tuesday and Wednesday.
The European Central Bank cut interest rates. What does that mean for the Fed?
Jun 6, 2024
When the Fed meets next week, they will be more focused on what's happening here in the United States.
When will rates go down? The answer rests on conflicting economic data.
Apr 4, 2024
The numbers are sending positive and negative signs, making the future of inflation, and the timing of Fed interest rate cuts, uncertain.
Interest rates worldwide might start falling as central banks meet this week
Mar 18, 2024
Switzerland may be the first to start rolling back the recent round of rate hikes.
Fed leaves interest rates unchanged, signals cuts are likely months away
Jan 31, 2024
“We want to see strong growth and a strong labor market,” said Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.
Why traders will be hanging on the Federal Reserve's every word Wednesday
Jan 30, 2024
The committee that sets interest rates is meeting this week, and the big question is whether — and when — they'll start cutting.
If the Federal Reserve had a word of the year, what would it be?
by
Matt Levin
Dec 13, 2023
We asked economists to give us a word of the year for 2023 that summed up the zeitgeist for monetary policy.
For public good, not for profit.
What the Fed's Summary of Economic Projections can reveal
Sep 20, 2023
The quarterly report gives clues about how members of the Federal Open Market Committee see the economy and what future steps they might take.
What kind of signal does FOMC unanimity send to markets and others watching the economy?
by
Matt Levin
Aug 16, 2023
Dissent on interest rate decisions might send mixed messages to Wall Street about where the economy is headed.
Watch prices and credit ahead of next rate decision, Chicago Fed CEO says
by
Kai Ryssdal
and Andie Corban
Apr 19, 2023
The intensity of a coming economic slowdown will depend on how much banks tighten credit conditions, says Austan Goolsbee.