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Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Esther George favors two additional interest rate increases this year.
August 23 -
U.S. central bankers are ready to raise interest rates again so long as the economy stays on track, according to a record of the Federal Reserve's most recent policy meeting.
August 22 -
The Federal Open Market Committee will have to raise the fed funds target rate three or four times to hit neutral rate.
August 21 -
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta President Raphael Bostic said he would not vote for a hike that would cause the Treasury yield curve to invert.
August 21 -
President Donald Trump said he expected Jerome Powell to be a cheap-money Fed chairman.
August 20 -
America’s growing debt pile may force the Federal Reserve to stop shrinking its balance sheet before the year is out, according to former U.S. Treasury adviser Zoltan Pozsar.
August 14 -
The Federal Reserve may need to raise interest rates to “somewhat restrictive” levels over the next couple of years to combat the effects of recent fiscal stimulus.
August 9 -
Data will determine if and how high the Federal Open Market Committee will raise rates, according to Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond President Tom Barkin.
August 8 -
Federal Reserve officials left the benchmark interest rate unchanged while reiterating their plan to gradually lift borrowing costs to keep the economy expanding at a healthy pace.
August 1 -
The market will have to wait for meeting minutes to learn policy makers' thinking on the accelerating GDP, the yield curve, interest rates, and trade wars.
July 27 -
Luke Tilley, chief economist at Wilmington Trust, discusses monetary policy and how a yield curve inversion could limit Fed rate hikes. Gary Siegel hosts.
July 26 -
Chairman Jerome Powell is under pressure to adopt what would amount to a put tied to the bond market.
July 25 -
The Federal Open Market Committee needs to be cautious on monetary policy or the yield curve could invert, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard said.
July 20 -
President Donald Trump criticized the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate increases, breaking with more than two decades of White House tradition of avoiding comments on monetary policy out of respect for the independence of the U.S. central bank.
July 19 -
The U.S. economic expansion rolled along and labor markets tightened in June and early July, even as tariffs heightened concern among manufacturers.
July 18 -
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said risks to the U.S. central bank’s inflation forecast were “roughly balanced” even as he noted lingering concern over sluggish price rises.
July 18 -
The Federal Reserve should get monetary policy to a neutral stance, but that could be “challenging,” Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Esther George said.
July 18 -
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said protectionism can hurt economic growth and potentially undermine wages.
July 17 -
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said the central bank will continue to gradually raise interest rates “for now’’ to keep inflation near target amid a strong U.S. labor market.
July 17 -
Neel Kashkari does not want to invert the yield curve.
July 17















