News
Federal Reserve's dot plot signals two rate cuts ahead in 2025 According to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool, investors did not anticipate a rate cut in the Fed’s June meeting.
The Federal Reserve’s latest dot plot, explained – and what it says about interest rate cuts From bankrate.com After the Federal Reserve’s latest interest rate decision, you may be tempted to try and ...
The Fed’s Dot-Plot Predicament: False Precision in Uncertain Times Investors treat the Fed’s rate projections as a promise from central bankers. They’re not.
The Federal Reserve’s dot plot showed that officials still see two more rate cuts coming in 2025, despite a more pessimistic outlook for the economy.
Fed policymakers making forecasts are going to struggle with coming up with a “thread that tells a consistent story,” said Thomas Simons, chief U.S. economist at investment bank Jefferies.
The Federal Reserve maintained its previously expected pace of rate cuts but signaled higher inflation and a slowdown in economic growth for 2025.
The Fed’s dot plot is a chart showing each Fed official’s forecast for the central bank’s key short-term interest rate.
After slashing interest rates by a half-percentage point today, the Federal Reserve’s “dot plot” showed that officials project another half-percentage point of cuts this year with further ...
The U.S. Federal Reserve should beef up its quarterly "dot plot" of policymakers' interest-rate-path views by including the individual economic expectations that inform each one, Austan Goolsbee ...
The dot plot, published every three months since 2012, is a graph depicting where each of the 19 U.S. central bankers expect the Fed's policy rate to be at the end of each of the next few years.
Ben Bernanke is not importing to the U.K. the “dot plot” that dominates the Fed’s communications with investors. A review of the Bank of England’s poor forecasts, which was headed by the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results