Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia President Patrick Harker: Says he supported the steady interest rate stance at latest FOMC meeting Fed will stay higher for longer, no sign of near-term rate cuts Now is a time to take stock of past rate hikes’ impact Next Fed rate choice “could go either way” depending on the
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A worker holds samples of new Japanese yen banknotes at a factory of the National Printing Bureau producing Bank of Japan notes at a media event about the new notes scheduled to be introduced in 2024, in Tokyo, Japan, November 21, 2022. REUTER By Tom Westbrook SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Investors are
PIMCO said it was bullish on the performance of long-term bonds: continue to favour long-term bonds over the next year, as they provide high yields not seen for over a decade while offering a cushion against economic uncertainty and expectations inflation has peaked More: U.S. economic growth is expected to slow the remainder of 2023
China bourses rallied after China announced support for equities markets; Beijing lowered stamp duty on stock traders for the first time the 2008 financial crisis and at the same time pledged to slow the pace of initial public offerings in an effort to boost investor confidence. Fed Chair Powell signalled caution on additional rate hikes.
© Reuters. U.S. Dollar banknotes are seen in this illustration taken July 17, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/file photo By Ankur Banerjee SINGAPORE (Reuters) – The dollar eased from a 12-week peak on Monday as traders weighed the U.S. monetary path after Fed Chair Jerome Powell left open the possibility of further interest rate increases, while the
Gold, XAU/USD, CPI, Trendline Breakout – Precious Metals Briefing: Gold prices sink in the aftermath of US inflation data Longer-term Treasury yields outpaced the front-end This will continue making life difficult for XAU/USD Recommended by Daniel Dubrovsky Get Your Free Gold Forecast Gold prices weakened in the aftermath of US inflation data on Thursday, reversing
JPMorgan economists now no longer expect a US recession ‘this calendar year’. This is one of those instances where it becomes abundantly clear that the consensus has moved from recession…to mild recession…to soft landing…to no landing. I still think there’s room for optimism in risk assets because so much money that was on the sidelines