Federal Reserve
Federal Reserve
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Inflation will reach 2% in 2019 and stay there in 2020, after getting close in 2018, Federal Reserve Board Chair Janet Yellen said during a press conference Wednesday afternoon.
September 20 -
The Summary of Economic projections calls for one more rate hike in 2017.
September 20 -
The Federal Reserve will begin its balance-sheet-reduction plan in October, the panel announced Wednesday.
September 20 -
A decade after the financial crisis first flickered, the U.S. is set this week to lead the developed world in exiting unconventional policies that central banks unleashed to save the global economy.
September 19 -
The Federal Open Market Committee meeting should produce a start date for balance sheet reduction and a new dot plot, but no rate hike.
September 18 -
After years of maintaining that inflation expectations were stable, Fed policymakers are starting to recognize a small but worrying softening.
September 14 -
Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen and President Donald Trump’s daughter and adviser Ivanka had a breakfast meeting on July 17 at the U.S. central bank, according to Yellen’s public schedule.
September 12 -
New York Fed President William Dudley said hurricanes could influence the timing of the next interest-rate increase, although growth warrants gradual hikes.
September 8 -
The White House is considering more than a half-dozen candidates to be the next head of the Federal Reserve, including economists and business people, with a goal of filling out a depleted board with expertise ranging from financial regulation to community banking, according to three people familiar with the matter.
September 8 -
New York Fed President William Dudley reiterated the need to continue raising interest rates while conceding the inflation model may be need a rethink.
September 8 -
Gradual rate hikes are likely to remain necessary, and the normalization of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet should not cause a “sudden or sizable increase in long-term yields,” Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Loretta Mester said Thursday.
September 7 -
The Senate Banking Committee voted Thursday to advance the nominations of Randal Quarles to serve as the Federal Reserve’s vice chairman for supervision and Joseph Otting to be Comptroller of the Currency, taking key steps toward President Donald Trump’s goal of reshaping regulation of Wall Street.
September 7 -
Lloyd Blankfein, who was Gary Cohn’s boss for more than a decade at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., endorsed his former deputy’s qualifications to run the Federal Reserve.
September 6 -
Federal Reserve Board Vice Chair Stanley Fischer said he will resign from the Board of Governors on or about Oct. 13.
September 6 -
The Federal Reserve’s rate hikes over the past year and a half may be harming the economy, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis President Neel kashkari said Tuesday.
September 5 -
The Federal Open Market Committee must be confident inflation will rise to the 2% target before raising interest rates again, Gov. Lael Brainard said Tuesday.
September 5 -
Watching for the “risks of excessive optimism, leverage, and maturity transformation” can limit future financial crises, Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said Friday.
August 25 -
Despite recent softness in economic data, especially inflation numbers, the Federal Reserve should continue to tighten monetary policy, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Loretta Mester said in a televised interview Friday.
August 25 -
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Esther George said if U.S. economic data hold up, there will probably be an opportunity to raise interest rates again in 2017.
August 24 -
All Federal Reserve banks felt the discount rate should remain at 1.75%, given “soft” inflation levels, according to the minutes of the discount rate meeting, released Tuesday.
August 22












