The president bets he can achieve his aims through tariffs without igniting inflation or a sell-off in American stocks.
The recent shift in monetary policy and the Trump administration’s economic agenda have raised concerns about inflationary ...
Higher tariffs could worsen the squeeze on American families by increasing their taxes, lowering their income, and requiring them to pay more for tariffed goods.
The Fed sets short-term interest rates, but does not directly control mortgage rates, which tend to move in tandem with the yields on long-term bonds. Those long-term rates are dependent on investor ...
Stock market experienced notable fluctuations following President Donald Trump's announcement of new tariffs on key U.S. trading partners. The tariffs include a 25% tax on imports from Canada and ...
Inflation has been a constant for multiple decades. The Federal Reserve regularly prints new money, and the government ...
Trump didn’t issue new tariffs as part of his Day One or Week One agenda, but he insists they’re coming— on Canada and Mexico ...
Investors should be on high alert for more AI-stock weakness after DeepSeek disrupted markets and sent shares tumbling.
Corporate America awaits the aftershocks of Trump the Tariff Man. The Trump administration said on Friday it would implement 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada starting today and 10% on China, ending ...
The Fed is in a holding pattern, awaiting more data, with December showing strong consumption but moderate inflation, suggesting disinflationary trends.
The split came into clear focus on Friday, the first day Fed officials spoke publicly in the wake of the decision earlier in the week to hold its benchmark interest rate steady in a range of 4.25%-4.5 ...
These are today's mortgage and refinance rates. Mortgage rates fell this week, but where they go next depends on inflation.