Fed Chair Jerome Powell to give Jackson Hole speech
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Now that Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has signaled that the central bank could soon cut its key interest rate, he faces a new challenge: how to do it without seeming to cave to the White House’s demands.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signaled a likely interest rate cut in September, noting "downside risks" to employment.
Minutes after the speech, investors pegged the chances of a quarter-point interest rate cut at 91%, up from a 75% chance assessed one day earlier, according to CME FedWatch Tool, a measure of market sentiment. Despite the market's positive reaction to Powell's speech, the Fed chair voiced a note of caution for the outlook for the U.S. economy.
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Austan Goolsbee said while some recent inflation readings have come in better than expected, he hopes one “dangerous” data point is just a blip.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell will deliver a speech next Friday at the Kansas City Fed's annual central banking conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. You might be interested in: U.S. orders deployment of military forces in the Caribbean to fight Latin American drug cartels labeled as terrorists,
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Friday announced an updated operating framework more oriented toward traditional efforts of promoting price stability, supplanting what had been a troubled effort that biased central bank policy toward its job mandate over its inflation target.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell is under intense pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump to cut interest rates. Economics professor Justin Wolfers talks to Becky Anderson about Powell’s future, and his potential successors.
Eric Trump, the Securities and Exchange Commission’s new, crypto-friendly chair Paul Atkins and two Fed governors on Donald Trump’s shortlist to replace Powell are all set to attend the Wyoming Blockchain Symposium at the Four Seasons hotel in Jackson Hole.