The prospect of an upcoming interest rate cut by the US Federal Reserve has been a key talking point in the Indian stock market over the past few weeks. While discussions around Fed rate cuts have ...
A Federal Reserve interest-rate cut in September now looks like a virtual certainty. But how stocks might react to such a move remains as murky as ever. In theory, lower interest rates should help ...
The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas released its monthly Texas Manufacturing Outlook this week, which gauges the sector based on surveys of producers — and many of those manufacturers issued ...
Markets might be running ahead of themselves by pricing aggressive Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts this year. According to CME Group data, investors are mostly pricing a 25-basis point cut in ...
Last week, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell provided some clarity regarding the central bank’s intentions when he said the “time has come” to start cutting interest rates. This led many ...
WASHINGTON: It is "hard to imagine" the Federal Reserve not cutting interest rates next month, a senior bank official said on Monday (Aug 26), in the latest signal that many policymakers favour a cut.
WASHINGTON, DC - MAY 01: Federal Reserve Bank Chair Jerome Powell announces that interest rates will ... [+] remain unchanged during a news conference at the bank's William McChesney Martin ...
Wall Street veteran Jim Paulse said in a CNBC interview on Friday that "a brand new bull market" in stocks is apparent after the Federal Reserve confirmed its intent to cut interest rates.
Copy Link US stocks traded mostly higher on Monday, with the Dow jumping 200 points to a record high as investors assess the potential path of future interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve.
So it looks like the Fed will finally cut rates in September. But by how much? And is it too late? Too early? After witnessing decades of endless soothsaying and hand-wringing over the central ...
"The time has come" for a shift toward rate cuts, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said. Borrowers eager for the Federal Reserve to abandon high interest rates could not have scripted a better four-word ...