Just briefly here because it's an interesting twist by the New York Fed on Friday's PCE inflation reading: it nixes the idea ...
The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge cooled as expected in January; however, the good news came with another ...
Inflation rose 2.5% over the year in January compared to 2.6% in December, marking the first decrease in four months.
Inflation decelerated but people are spending less and saving more as prices keep rising and wage growth slows. It’s worrying ...
The "generally benign" composition of Friday's January personal consumption expenditures inflation data — though not as soft as some had hoped — "flags two distinct paths to a rate cut by June as well ...
Inflation dropped slightly in January but consumer spending, the primary driver of the U.S. economy, also saw its biggest decline in four years.
It's no secret that we don't view the PCE inflation data as being anywhere remotely as big of a market mover as CPI. Today's ...
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, ...
Gold prices dropped to their lowest level in over two weeks on Thursday as the U.S. dollar strengthened, with investors ...
The inflation measure released on Friday (the PCE price index favored by the Fed as a yardstick for its inflation target) ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results