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 Federal Reserve on Wednesday kept interest rates unchanged, bypassing a trend of dropping cuts and bucking President ...
Entering 2020, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage was already below 4 percent. Then the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic brought ...
The Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged Wednesday as it began a new wait-and-see policy stance amid a cloudy ...
Aggregate US debt is $101.353T, or 3.45x GDP, indicating a historically high leverage that risks recession. Read why ...
Nonetheless, already there is a clash with President Trump, who believes interest rates are “far too high." On his Truth ...
The president last week inserted himself into the debate over interest rates ahead of the central bank’s meeting this week.
Here’s how the central bank’s interest rate stance influences car loans, credit cards, mortgages, savings and student loans.
President Donald Trump on Thursday said he would press the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates “immediately,” rekindling a fight over the historically independent U.S. central bank.
The Federal Reserve will hold its first policy meeting of the year on Jan. 28 and 29, where it is widely expected to keep ...
The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady at its January meeting following three consecutive rate cuts amid uncertainty ...
The Federal Reserve, or “the Fed,” is the central bank of the U.S. and plays an outsized role in shaping the nation’s monetary policy. One of its key functions is setting interest rates.