Wednesday rose by +0.25%. The dollar rose moderately on Wednesday after the FOMC kept interest rates unchanged as expected.
Every three months since January 2012, the Federal Reserve has sent analysts scurrying by updating its “dot plot,” which has become the de facto monetary policy forecast of the US central bank ...
Almost nobody expects the Federal Open Market Committee to cut interest rates on Wednesday. That puts investor attention ...
The U.S. Federal Reserve kept interest rates steady, as widely expected, and kept its projection of two rate cuts this year.
Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images The Federal Reserve’s dot plot showed that officials still see two more rate cuts coming in 2025 and another two in 2026, though expectations varied among ...
Fed policymakers making forecasts are going to struggle with coming up with a “thread that tells a consistent story,” said ...
The Fed’s dot plot is a chart that records each Fed official’s projection for the central bank’s key short-term interest rate. The dot plot is updated every three months and is meant to prov ...
Federal Reserve officials publish their forecasts for the central bank’s key interest rate on a chart known as the 'dot plot.' Below, we've highlighted the median forecast in orange. The ...
It’s a near certainty among economists and investors that the Federal Reserve will lower interest rates for a third straight time on Wednesday, but what happens in 2025 remains a relative mystery.
The dollar fell back from its best levels Wednesday afternoon when the Fed’s dot-plot still projected two 25 bp rate cuts by the end of this year. Also, the FOMC cut its US 2025 GDP forecast ...
That puts investor attention squarely on the policymakers' Summary of Economic Projections, especially the closely watched dot plot, and Chair ... projection of two 25-bp rate cuts.