The Federal Reserve is likely to resume cutting interest rates in June and could reduce short-term borrowing costs again in ...
U.S. consumer prices increased more than expected in January, reinforcing the Federal Reserve's message that it was in no ...
Consumers are less confident about the nation’s economy than they were a few months ago. Rising inflation and fears of an imminent global trade war owing to President Donald Trump’s proposed tariffs ...
January's stronger-than-expected consumer-price index report could push the Federal Reserve to keep its hand on the pause button for interest-rate cuts throughout the rest of the year, according to ...
January's Consumer Price Index will serve as the latest test of whether inflation pressures have eased further.
The consumer price index was expected to increase 0.3% in January, according to the Dow Jones consensus estimate.
Soon after the figures were released, Trump went into blame mode. He suggested that former President Joe Biden was the reason ...
The consumer price index rose 3% from a year ago ... it takes a little bit of the urgency off of the Federal Reserve," Cory Stahle, an economist at the Indeed Hiring Lab, said after the jobs ...
Inflation ticked higher in January as stubbornly high prices continued to strain Americans' household finances as the Federal Reserve ... said that the consumer price index — a broad measure ...
U.S. inflation accelerated last month as the cost of groceries, gas, and used cars rose, a trend that will likely underscore ...
January's Consumer Price Index shows a significant increase, with economists concerned about future price hikes.
The change was slightly above analysts' expectations and is likely to bolster reluctance at the Fed to cut interest rates any further.