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Powell is facing two days of what could be tough grilling on Capitol Hill, as Trump has repeatedly urged the Fed to reduce borrowing costs ...
Monitor 100 companies reported net assets of $568.1 billion, new business volume of $205.6 billion and 27,128 employees.
S&P 500 gains mask real value declines; USD weakens amid aggressive tariffs and debt concerns. Click here for more ...
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon cautioned European leaders in Dublin about the continent's declining economic competitiveness, ...
A brewing debate inside the Federal Reserve over how to address risks posed by President Trump's tariffs threatens to end a period of relative unity, with officials potentially at odds over whether ...
The Fed was forced into one of the most aggressive tightening cycles in history — 11 hikes in 12 months — all to combat the inflation that Powell’s inaction had helped unleash.
By stubbornly refusing to lower interest rates despite ample data urging him to do so, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell is committing his third major policy blunder in six years.
The June jobs report cratered the odds for a July rate cut. Stocks cheered the strong data but dimmer rate-cut views prevented bigger gains.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell said tariff concerns delayed interest rate cuts, stating the central bank would have likely reduced rates this year if not for potential consumer price hikes.
The Federal Reserve would likely have lowered interest rates this year if it weren’t for President Donald Trump’s significant policy changes, Chair Jerome Powell said Tuesday.
For all the turbulence on the Australian stock market in recent months, you wouldn't have known it on June 30, with analysts hailing a "surprisingly good year" for the ASX 200.
Trump's Fed chair shortlist signals a potential pivot to lower rates. Markets react with a falling dollar and rising rate cut bets.