Stories Tagged as
Rate cut
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.
The Fed might cut interest rates soon. That's weighing on business owners' plans.
by
Justin Ho
Jan 2, 2024
Do they wait for lower rates in the future or borrow what they need today? It’s a question of cost versus opportunity.
Some investors are eyeing riskier bets following rate cut hints from the Fed
by
Henry Epp
Dec 15, 2023
The assumption is that the economy will chug along and that borrowing costs will fall. But they might not. What makes these riskier stocks attractive?
Federal Reserve keeps key interest rate unchanged and foresees 3 rate cuts next year
Dec 13, 2023
“Inflation has eased over the past year but remains over our longer run goal of 2%,” Powell said
A divided Fed reduces rates but may not cut again this year
Sep 18, 2019
The modest cut — to a range of 1.75% to 2% — irritates Trump, who has insisted on more aggressive action.
Mississippi business owner celebrates rate cut
by
Kai Ryssdal
and Andie Corban
Aug 1, 2019
Kai Ryssdal checked in with Austin Golding, a small business owner in Mississippi.
For public good, not for profit.
The first rate cut in over 10 years: what a difference a decade makes
Jul 31, 2019
A global economic meltdown caused the last rate cuts. Today, the economy is far from that point.
Behind the scenes at the Fed
by
Kai Ryssdal
, Sean McHenry
and Maria Hollenhorst
Jul 31, 2019
Kai Ryssdal spoke with a former Fed governor about what it's like to be in the room when the FOMC makes a major decision.
Fed cuts key rate in its first reduction in more than decade
Jul 31, 2019
The Federal Reserve announced today that it has cut interest rates, causing stocks to fall slightly.