On "Forbes Newsroom," Steve Forbes responds to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s testimony before the House and the ...
Because the economy is doing well, the Fed can take its time to decide when and whether to lower interest rates.
Just before Fed Chair Jerome Powell began a second day of hearings on Capitol Hill, new data showed consumer prices jumped in ...
President Trump said that interest rates should come down earlier Wednesday. Officials have said they are in no rush to cut ...
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Wednesday President Donald Trump’s calls for lower interest rates won’t lead the central bank to change its rate decisions.
Powell was also asked about the high cost of home ownership and President Trump's trade policies, but as usual, the Fed chair ...
Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell told a Senate committee that he and his colleagues are in no hurry to cut borrowing costs, so long as the job market is holding up and prices continue to climb.
Jerome Powell is punting more than the Kansas City Chiefs did in the Super Bowl as he dodges questions from lawmakers, said David Russell, global head of market strategy at TradeStation. Powell is ...
U.S. stocks end little changed on Tuesday after Fed Chair Powell rehashes last month's comments. Focus turns to inflation, earnings and tariffs.
After cutting its key rate a full percentage point in the final three months of last year, with "the economy remaining strong ...
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell will tell the Senate banking committee the Fed isn't "in a hurry" to resume its interest ...
Faced with the threat of rising inflation, the U.S. Federal Reserve will wait until next quarter before cutting rates again, ...