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The Consumer Price Index (CPI) release coming on Tuesday, July 15 will offer investors a fresh look at inflation. Blue Chip ...
The Fed is expected to hold interest rates steady in July, waiting for more clarity on how tariffs will affect the economy.
Wall Street's big question heading into July's Federal Reserve meeting is whether there will be a rate cut in September.
Earnings growth is concentrated in a few tech giants, while most of the market remains stagnant and valuations are stretched.
Speaking of inflation, the UK will also release its CPI numbers for June on Wednesday. At its latest decision, the Bank of England held interest rates unchanged, but the outcome was slightly more ...
On a macroeconomic level, we note that Japan’s nationwide CPI for June is set to be released next Friday. Should the CPI rates showcase an acceleration of inflationary pressures in the US economy it ...
Last week's bearish formation got met with a renewed breakout, taking gold up 2% from its 3,284 lows. Click to read.
British Pound US Dollar, Australian Dollar US Dollar, New Zealand Dollar US Dollar, US Dollar Index Futures. Read 's Market ...
A fifth straight decline in initial jobless claims places even more emphasis on Tuesday’s CPI data to vindicate markets' ...
Are markets too confident in a September Fed rate cut? Yes. But are central banks too nervous about another inflation wave? Also, yes, argues James Smith. He’s got a bone to pic ...
Yesterday, we characterized the prevailing mortgage rate momentum as "broadly sideways," and while that's still very true in ...
That, in a nutshell, is the problem. Central banks are still haunted by the most recent inflation spike, which economists everywhere – myself included – failed to predict.