But the holiday-shortened week will still give Wall Street a chance to parse through the Fed's expectations for next year's ...
Chicago Federal Reserve Bank President Austan Goolsbee said interest rates would be lowered by a “fair amount” next year in ...
Federal Reserve Bank of New York President John Williams said Friday he expects the central bank to deliver more interest ...
Fed officials had thought their preferred inflation gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, would be 2.1% by the end of 2025 at September’s monetary policy meeting ... “The good news ...
The stock market is coming off a sluggish week. The Dow lost 1.8% last week and has lost ground in each of the last seven sessions. The S&P 500 dipped 0.64%, and has retreated in four of the past five ...
Federal Reserve officials say they are likely to keep reducing interest rates for now, and investors still expect them to do so at the U.S. central bank's Dec. 17-18 meeting. But how far they will ...
A tech rally pushed the major indexes to new highs last week as the latest economic data releases did little to shake investor confidence that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates at its ...
The UN Security Council will convene on Monday for an emergency closed-door meeting regarding Syria, in the aftermath of President Bashar Al-Assad fleeing the country, multiple diplomatic sources ...
Yet the data was not likely to signal a material shift in labor market conditions that would cause the Fed to rethink its rate trajectory at its Dec 17-18 meeting. However, data on consumer ...
and then pause at its first meeting in 2025. Tim Duy, chief economist at SGH Macro Advisors, said this expectation was solidified by comments from influential Fed Governor Christopher Waller that ...
follow The Daily Star's Google News channel. After two rate cuts since September totalling three quarters of a percentage-point, the Fed's benchmark lending rate now sits between 4.50 and 4.75 ...
I was sitting in a meeting this week and I started thinking ... There’s our website, www.columbian.com, which will have the latest breaking news. There’s our app, with versions for Apple ...