The Fed’s newly tolerant inflation stance is a declaration of victory in its long war on savers.
Read More
Tag Archives: The Fed
Selling Treasuries, Buying Charmin
This week, the only assets people did not rush to sell were food staples, medical supplies and hygienic paper products.
Read More
Settling Up With Paul Volcker
Baby boomers owe a big debt to Paul Volcker and his successful fight against inflation. Millennials, not so much.
Read More
Drawing A New Line On Interest Rates
While a rate cut next week is nearly certain, the Fed should hold out against premature and political pressures to do more.
Read More
Can The Fed Bend Without Bowing?
Trump wants the Fed to cut rates. The Fed may do so without necessarily bowing to presidential pressure.
Read More
Is The Fed Still Independent?
In word and deed, if reports are true about planned nominees, Trump pays little heed to the Fed’s vital independence.
Read More
The Dreaded Inverted Yield Curve
Who’s afraid of the big bad bond market standing on its head? Not the chief of the New York Fed.
Read More
Trumping The Fed
As breaches of presidential protocol go, Trump’s jawing at the Federal Reserve is just another day at the Oval Office.
Read More
Libor Replacements Make Their Debut
Regulators on both sides of the Atlantic are ready to roll out replacements for a discredited and increasingly irrelevant Libor.
Read More
Why Stocks Thrived Amid Pandemic
After crashing in the darkest days last March, equities finished 2020 with solid gains as investors saw a brighter future.
Read More