June U.S. Jobs Report Raises Pressure on Fed for September Rate Cut
The June jobs report sent a clear message to the Federal Reserve — the central bank risks falling behind the curve.
Fed's Favorite Inflation Reading Highlights Last Week of Q2
Friday June 28 will bring investors the May reading on the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index, the Fed's preferred inflation measure, which should show prices on a "core" basis — which excludes food and energy — rose 0.1% last month
Non-Farm Payrolls Mislead: The Labor Market Is Weakening; Inflation Is Falling
The big economic news of the week was the +272K rise in Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP) (released on Friday, June 7).
U.S. Corporate Profits Unexpectedly Fell in Q1
Q1 U.S. Corporate Profits (revised) came in at -1.7% QoQ to $3.93 trillion, vs. +3.9% expected and +3.7% in prior quarter.
As U.S. Debt Soars past $34 Trillion, Congress has Killed Off its Plan to Tackle the Crisis
The then newly elected House of Representatives’ speaker said in October to establish a bipartisan commission to tackle the federal government’s growing $34.6 trillion in debt.
US Economy Slows and Inflation Jumps, Damping Soft-Landing Hopes
U.S. economic growth slid to an almost two-year low last quarter while inflation jumped to uncomfortable levels, interrupting a run of strong demand and muted price pressures that had fueled optimism for a soft landing.
Latest U.S. Inflation Report Showed Rising Prices Continue to Weigh on American Consumers
The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, was up 2.5% for the 12 months that ended in February, a faster pace than January’s 2.4% rise in prices.
Fed-Favored Inflation Gauge Seen Rising Most in a Year
Underlying U.S. inflation probably rose in January by the most in a year, as tracked by the Federal Reserve’s preferred metric, highlighting the long and bumpy path to taming price pressures.
U.S. Retail Sales Dived, Sinking Treasury Yields, but Initial Jobless Claims Slipped by 8,000
Retail sales badly undershot forecasts, including a dive in sales at nonstore retailers like Amazon (AMZN).
Slower U.S. Inflation Is Set to Fuel Fed Rate-Cut Optimism
The pulse of U.S. inflation likely continued to slow at the start of the year, helping to feed expectations that the Federal Reserve will find interest-rate cuts more palatable in the coming months.
Fed to Hold Interest Rates Steady But Start Considering Cuts
The U.S. Federal Reserve yesterday completed its two-day policy meeting and will likely hold interest rates steady for a fourth straight meeting but avoid signaling an imminent interest-rate cut.
Inflation Hotter Than Expected In December—But Core Inflation Falls To 2.5-Year Low
U.S. inflation moderated less than expected last month.
Yellen Says U.S. Economy is in ‘Soft Landing’
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Friday the U.S. economy is achieving a “soft landing” as inflation continues to ease without showing signs of a significant economic downturn.
U.S. Corporate Bankruptcy Filings Hit the Highest since 2020. More Likely on the Horizon
Investors appear convinced that major Western central banks are close to a much awaited pivot, from raising interest rates to cutting them.