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...The market reaction came after the Federal Open Market Committee voted unanimously to leave rates unchanged at a 23-year high of 5.25 per cent to 5.5 per cent....
...If the Reagan‑Thatcher revolution was about crushing union power, the pendulum seems to be shifting in favour of labour. Unions are changing too....
...China’s “credit impulse” — the change in the flow of credit — was a “headwind for growth for much of the last year” but has now moved back into positive territory, BofA’s analysts said....
...In contrast, the strength of the US economy and high levels of government spending relative to taxes could persuade the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates high for some time, say investors, which could...
...European business schools have surpassed US ones in the FT’s annual responsible business education awards, which credit them for more innovative teaching on issues of sustainability and research with positive...
...At some point, this risks leaving lenders without sufficient reserves and could cause unwanted volatility in short-term borrowing costs and even a credit crunch....
...Federal and state governments were less likely to sell assets, fearing a political backlash....
...Hopes last week of a ceasefire deal ahead of the start of Ramadan this coming Sunday — or for that matter Biden’s State of the Union address on Thursday — have fizzled....
...Starbucks in 2022 introduced more sizes for baristas’ green aprons and the option for customers to tip with their credit cards, two of the union’s initial demands....
...Instead, banks would have to rely on more traditional, standardised assumptions that measure how risky assets are by using credit ratings from agencies....
...Students at Munich’s technical university are able to take part in programmes at UnternehmerTUM as part of their degrees, where they are able to receive the same amount of credits as for an academic course...
...Federal Reserve vice-chair for supervision Michael Barr had gold-plated the Basel rules, provoking a fierce backlash from Wall Street’s finest....
...The US president sought to ease the pressure on would-be homeowners through tax credits outlined in this month’s State of the Union address, but that benefit is unlikely to have as big an impact as lowering...
...And high-tax payers will put it into general municipal bond funds....
...Nominal credit card debt hit a record $1.13tn in the last three months of 2023, growing at one of the fastest rates in more than 20 years, according to the New York branch of the Federal Reserve....
...The divergence between European and US credit spreads has played out primarily at the weakest end of the credit quality spectrum....
...(There is a parallel with the US economy where state bank licensing regimes coexist with a set of federal licensing rules.)...
...‘Khanservative’ Lina Khan, the chair of the Federal Trade Commission, has a new group of unlikely supporters, The Wall Street Journal writes....
...The party lost seats in the 2021 federal election....
...The federal structures are far too complex for that.”...
...The US Federal Trade Commission last month sued to block Kroger’s $24.6bn bid to buy rival Albertsons, the largest supermarket deal in history....
...Denmark’s largest union 3F announced yesterday that it had joined Scandinavia in the latest escalation in tensions over workers’ rights against US electric-car maker Tesla....
...The proposal issued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Tuesday would subject non-bank companies that offer digital payments to a regulatory scheme similar to that for banks or credit unions....
...Biden has promised homebuyers a tax credit worth up to $400 a month for the next two years — though such a measure would require congressional approval....
...Look to the US, the argument often went, whose federal budget leads to much more redistribution between states than takes place between EU members....
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