March 12 (Reuters) - As oil prices surged on Thursday amid an intensifying Iran war, U.S. President Donald Trump again demanded Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell cut interest rates. "He should be ...
Rising oil prices tied to the Iran conflict are pushing investors to delay expectations of a Fed rate cut amid familiar inflation risks.
Goolsbee says the Fed won’t cut rates until inflation shows clear progress toward 2%, signaling borrowing costs may stay ...
February fiscal flows added a $360B+ private sector surplus, boosting liquidity and risk assets; Fed near peak rates.
Range reports that while oil shocks can impact recessions, current economic indicators suggest we aren’t on that path yet.
Financial markets are already betting that the Federal Reserve will be easing policy again in 2026, but the people who actually set or model rates are sending a cooler message. The emerging consensus ...
The Federal Reserve left interest rates alone at its first meeting of the year, keeping borrowing costs at a multiyear high for Americans as policymakers grow more cautious about future cuts. The ...
While the Fed is projecting growth, four key threats could derail the economy in 2026: policy-driven inflation, "stagflation ...