INDIANAPOLIS - The Indiana State Board of Education will hold a special meeting Tuesday to...Schneider, Chelsea
He vetoed a second bill that he said would"create confusion for consumers, meat processors and producers." All the bills were passed during the recently concluded session of the Wyoming Legislature. The governor took the action on Friday, March 15. Gordon vetoedSF0013 - Federal land use plans ...
Inflationary pressures have continued to ease since we cut interest rates in August. The economy has been evolving broadly as we expected. If that continues, we should be able to reduce rates gradually over time. But it’s vital that inflation stays low, so we need to be careful...
By Charley Blaine Charley Blaine writes about stocks and financial markets, bonds and interest rates, oil and other commodities, and the economy. He has written for MSN Money, Investing.com, MergerMarket, Benzinga, Forbes, and USA Today. ...
"Up until about a year or a year and a half ago, if you told me what interest rates were doing, I could tell you what growth and value were doing. But the relationship flipped on a dime," Weniger says. "There's a specific date where everything changed the collective view to a vie...
The Fed is nothing if not obliging to Wall Street. The last time the Fed raised interest rates by a half-point at one meeting was on March 21, 2000 – more than two decades ago. At that FOMC meeting, the Fed Funds rate went from 6 percent to 6.50 percent. ...
What you need to know today Fed cuts rates by 25 basis points On Thursday, the U.S. Federal Reservecut interest rates by 25 basis points, or a quarter percentage point, bringing the target range to 4.50%-4.75%. At the Fed's news conference, chair Jerome Powell told reporters he wo...
Markets are pricing in a 65% chance the Fed will cut borrowing costs by 50 basis points at the conclusion of its two-day meeting on Wednesday, according to the CME's FedWatch Tool. Market expectations on the cut's size have been volatile in recent days, with only a 34...
Officials votedat their most recent meeting in May to hold interest rates steady at a range of 5.25% to 5.5%, the highest level since 2001. Although policymakers left the door open to rate cuts later this year in their post-meeting statement, they also stressed the need for "greater c...
With Federal Reserve officials all but guaranteed to hold interest rates steady today, Wall Street’s attention will be laser-focused instead on whether Chair Jerome Powell and his colleagues are getting more pessimistic about the outlook for inflation.