A large majority of Americans say their incomes aren't keeping pace with inflation. Here's what the numbers say.
The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge cooled in January, if economists’ forecasts are right.
The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge cooled as expected in January, providing a hopeful data point to price-weary Americans.
The WSJ Dollar Index is down 0.77 point or 0.75% this month to 101.74 –Largest one-month point and percentage decline since Sept. 2024 –Down for two consecutive months –Down 1.01 points or 0.99% over ...
The latest reading of the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge showed that prices rose in line with economists' ...
The central bank’s preferred inflation measure, released on Friday, climbed 2.5 percent in January from a year earlier, ...
Inflation rose 2.5% over the year in January compared to 2.6% in December, marking the first decrease in four months.
The latest inflation and spending data from Friday’s personal consumption expenditures report point to “a worrisome monetary policy conundrum” for the Federal Reserve, according to Olu Sonola, the ...
The Federal Reserve won’t cut interest rates again until it's convinced the rate of inflation has resumed slowing. Even a decline in the yearly inflation rate in January is not enough to persuade them ...
New data may point to emerging tension between the U.S. Federal Reserve's dual inflation and employment goals, as price ...
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Beth Hammack reckons the U.S. central bank can keep steadily shrinking its balance sheet through a period of uncertain government finances, while noting she ...
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