Stock futures are mixed Thursday morning as investors react to a barrage of earnings reports from major companies and important economic indicators.
The Federal Reserve kicked off its second Trump era right where it left off: Doing exactly what it wanted to do, ignoring President Donald Trump’s demands that it lower rates.
The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.55 percent to 8,493.70, led by technology, mining and energy stocks. The broader All Ordinaries index settled 0.52 percent higher at 8,745.90.
Risks to the U.S. stock market are piling up as cracks emerge in the technology trade and the path for interest rates is clouded by persistent inflation worries that are being exacerbated by the ...
The Bank of England looks likely to cut interest rates next week, when it could also nudge investors to expect faster ...
The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady on Wednesday and gave little insight into when further reductions in borrowing costs may take place in an economy where inflation remains above target, ...
A desire for low rates confronts a very different economic backdrop—with higher price pressures—from his first term.
Trump returned to power last week with promises of import tariffs, an immigration crackdown, tax cuts and looser regulation.
Since officials first cut rates in September, inflation has made uneven progress back down toward the central bank’s target.
A leading Australian economist remains unconvinced the Reserve Bank of Australia should cut rates when it meets in February ...
The Federal Reserve kept its key interest rate unchanged as officials grappled with uncertainty caused by inflation and ...
The Federal Reserve's future moves on interest rates in 2025 will be in a narrow range unless the trajectory of inflation ...