After wrapping up a two-day policy meeting, the Federal Reserve left its benchmark rate unchanged near 4.4 percent—exactly what markets had penciled in.
Officials offered few clues on timing, but hinted that a weaker labour market or a sharper hit to growth from President Donald Trump’s trade tariffs could tip the balance toward easing later this year.
Most economists still expect at least one trim in the second half of 2025. Wells Fargo’s chief economist Jay Bryson argues that higher import costs are already squeezing demand and may soon lift unemployment enough for the Fed to move.
Fresh staff projections due today are widely anticipated to include a rate-cut scenario.
Complicating matters, Middle-East tensions and domestic political sparring have stoked broader uncertainty.
Trump, who has lambasted Chair Jerome Powell for keeping borrowing costs elevated, is unlikely to be satisfied until cuts materialise—setting the stage for an increasingly delicate balancing act between inflation vigilance and the Fed’s “maximum employment” mandate.
In a surprising long-term performance shift, gold has officially outpaced the U.S. stock market over the past 25 years—dividends included.
The United States has rolled out a broad set of new import tariffs this week, targeting over 30 countries and economic blocs in a sharp escalation of its trade protection measures, according to list from WatcherGuru.
After a week of record-setting gains in U.S. markets, investors are shifting focus to a quieter yet crucial stretch of macroeconomic developments.
Robert Kiyosaki, author of Rich Dad Poor Dad, has issued a bold prediction on silver, calling it the “best asymmetric buy” currently available.