Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell will answer questions from members of the Senate Banking Committee starting at 10 a.m.
A limited "decoupling" from the U.S. Federal Reserve could continue as it pauses its own policy easing, analysts say.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell will tell the Senate banking committee the Fed isn't "in a hurry" to resume its interest rate cutting campaign.
The Fed cut interest rates by a quarter-point in December. According to the agency’s forward guidance “dot plot,” the committee’s members penciled in just two quarter-point cuts for 2025 ...
The Fed faces complex decisions as it decides how quickly to cut rates or whether to raise them amid Trump's tariffs and ...
Policymakers left their benchmark rate unchanged amid signs that the economy is humming along, defying the president’s tradition-bucking pressure on the central bank.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell will address the decision to maintain the FFTR at 4.25%–4.5% following the January ...
The Fed chair is expected to deliver a simple message to lawmakers: Because the economy is doing well, the Fed can take its time to decide when and whether to lower interest rates.
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta President Raphael Bostic said he wants to wait “a while” before cutting interest rates again following last year’s reductions amid uncertainty over where the US economy ...
The Federal Reserve on Wednesday hit pause on interest rate cuts in its first key decision of President Donald Trump’s second ...
The decision reflects a cautious stance as the Fed assesses the direction of inflation and policies President Trump may ...
Jerome Powell is punting more than the Kansas City Chiefs did in the Super Bowl as he dodges questions from lawmakers, said David Russell, global head of market strategy at TradeStation. Powell is ...