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Transcripts of the Federal Reserve’s 2015 policy meetings show that then-Fed Chair Janet Yellen acknowledged that the Fed should sacrifice potential job gains in order to cut off the possibility of higher inflation.
January 8 -
Federal Reserve officials shouldn’t intervene to slow rising bond yields because that is expected to happen as the U.S. economy recovers, said Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Robert Kaplan.
January 8 -
It was inevitable that muni yields would need to rise somewhat as the UST 10-year broke above 1%, however participants said the supply/demand imbalance will keep munis from rising as quickly as Treasuries. More than $1 billion inflows reported.
January 7 -
FOMC members backed maintaining asset purchases, although “a couple” were “open” to “weighting purchases of Treasury securities toward longer maturities,” according to minutes released Wednesday.
January 6 -
Federal Reserve officials unanimously backed holding the pace of asset purchases steady when they met last month.
January 6 -
The rotational changes for the FOMC voters will be more centered, walking a more balanced line between hawks and doves, analysts believe.
December 31 -
Another $900 billion of fiscal support would “absolutely” make a significant difference to the U.S. economy’s ability to endure COVID-19, but “challenging months” lie ahead, a top Federal Reserve official said.
December 21 -
Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Richard Clarida, voicing optimism on the economic outlook thanks to coronavirus vaccines, said the U.S. will likely avoid slipping back into recession as growth rebounds next year.
December 18 -
The Federal Reserve's Summary of Economic Projections forecasts inflation won't hit its 2% target next year, and others agree.
December 18 -
The Federal Open Market Committee announcement commits it to buying at least $120 billion of securities a month until “substantial further progress” is made on its dual mandate of stable prices and maximum employment, suggesting it will continue well into 2022.
December 16