News

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Beth Hammack said that she does not see an immediate reason to cut interest rates and that the U.S. economy is "really healthy." ...
Evidence of a U.S. manufacturing slowdown is mounting, according to the Bank of America Institute. Tariffs could help reduce that slowdown and bring more advanced production back stateside, but ...
The economy’s resilience so far to President Trump’s global trade war risks emboldening him and unleashing the sort of ...
Wall Street is pointing lower before the opening bell with new tariffs announced for Europe and Mexico and as the unofficial ...
A busy week ahead for investors will see inflation data, the debate about the Fed's next move, and the start of second ...
Both narratives are worryingly rose-tinted. It still requires a leap of faith to assume Trump will back away from implementing tariffs on August 1. Last week the president claimed that his import ...
One is that Mr Trump is not serious: most of the “Liberation Day” tariffs that caused the crash in April were postponed; the ...
The European Union has warned that its trade with the United States could be effectively wiped out if Washington makes good on its threat to slap a 30% tariff on goods imported from the bloc.
American car buyers braced for the worst when President Donald Trump’s auto tariffs started taking effect in April. But so far, prices are little changed.
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President Mary Daly said she’s seeing increasing evidence that tariffs may not lead to a large or sustained inflation surge, helping bolster the case for a ...
Bank of America says tariffs might spark a ‘reshoring’ boom—but experts say it might be a double-edged sword for the economy. Greg McKenna. Updated June 27, 2025 at 12:04 PM.