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...A top Federal Reserve official has said inflation could “see-saw” if policymakers cut rates too soon, warning that the descent towards the central bank’s 2 per cent goal was likely to slow in the months...
...Topher Forhecz is the FT’s executive producer. The FT’s global head of audio is Cheryl Brumley. The show’s theme song is by Metaphor Music. Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com...
...Plus, price rises in services in the US are making the Federal Reserve’s decision-making over interest rates more complicated....
...Ten of the Federal Reserve’s 12 rate-setting voters have managed at least 20 public appearances between them in the past fortnight....
...Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell has said he still expects inflation to fall towards the US central bank’s 2 per cent goal, as new data highlighted the bumpy road ahead for officials as they debate when...
...The business, which has been central to the bank’s growth in recent years, was already in the sights of the Federal Reserve over money laundering controls....
...Jay Powell said the Federal Reserve’s job of bringing down inflation was “not yet done” and the US central bank needed “greater confidence” that price pressures were easing before cutting interest rates,...
...in one of the few districts of Atlanta that voted for Trump in 2020....
...Jay Powell, chair of the Federal Reserve, likes to say: “It will likely be appropriate to begin dialling back policy restraint at some point this year.”...
...was still “walking on eggshells” The ECB looks like it might learn more lessons from Ben Bernanke’s review of the Bank of England than officials in London after Isabel Schnabel advocated the ECB publishing...
...The market’s stubborn hopes of a first cut to US interest rates in March were finally crushed over the past week by strong economic data and firm messaging from Jay Powell, chair of the Federal Reserve....
...Bostic is a voting member of the Federal Open Market Committee....
...Top Federal Reserve officials have tried to temper market speculation about imminent interest rate cuts, warning that the US central bank needed to see more progress on inflation before considering lowering...
...On Thursday the IMF said Asian central banks should reach policy decisions based on domestic inflation, rather than making them “overly dependent on anticipated moves by the Federal Reserve”....
...The fact that the rises are small and that this is not the Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of inflation is not enough to negate the signal, especially combined with this week’s gangbusters US retail...
...More and more market participants and pundits are betting that stalling disinflation might stop the Federal Reserve from cutting rates at all in 2024....
...Traders have built up bets that the Federal Reserve could raise interest rates again, a once-unthinkable prospect that highlights a shift in market expectations after stronger than expected US economic data...
...Federal Reserve officials have indicated they still expect to cut interest rates by three-quarters of a percentage point this year, sending US equity markets to record highs....
...Monetary policy: Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta president Raphael Bostic, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City president Jeffrey Schmid and Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco president Mary Daly speak...
...US Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell has said it is likely to take “longer than expected” for inflation to return to the central bank’s 2 per cent target and justify cuts to interest rates....
...Federal Reserve The Federal Reserve is probably in the best position, ahead of its rates decision on January 31, because inflation is moderating without an economic downturn....
...Fedspeak: Atlanta Federal Reserve president Raphael Bostic will discuss the economic outlook, monetary policy and the state of the banking industry at a fireside chat at the 2024 Banking Outlook conference...
...Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell said on Thursday that the US central bank was “not far” from having the confidence to start lowering borrowing costs....
...The Federal Reserve will be forced to hold interest rates at a high level for longer than markets and central bankers anticipate, according to academic economists polled by the Financial Times....
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