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Natural-gas futures fall by more than 5%; EIA reports a weekly rise in U.S. natural-gas supplies
The U.S. Energy Information Administration reported on Thursday that domestic natural-gas supplies rose by 74 billion cubic feet for the week ended June 17. That compared to an average forecast for an increase of 70 billion cubic feet from analysts polled by S&P Global Commodity Insights. Total working gas stocks in storage stand at 2.169 trillion cubic feet, down 305 billion cubic feet from a year ago and 331 billion cubic feet below the five-year average, the government said. Following the data, July natural gas NGN22, -6.31% was down 37.2 cents, or 5.4%, at $6.486 per million British thermal units. Prices ... (full story)
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- From bundesbank.de|Jun 23, 2022
I am delighted to open the policy session of this year’s Joint Spring Conference. I would like to thank you for accepting our invitation to come to Eltville and present your work and share with us your thoughts on households’ and firms’ expectations and their relevance for monetary policy – the topic of this year’s conference. This is already the second conference on households’ and firms’ survey expectations, co-hosted by the Bundesbank and the Banque de France. The previous Joint Conference on this topic took place almost three years ago. A short space of time under normal circumstances. But in light of the global events that have overwhelmed us during these past three years – the pandemic and Russia’s war on Ukraine – it’s almost like another era for many. tweet at 10:30am: ECB'S NAGEL: RISK IS RISING THAT INFLATION EXPECTATIONS GET DE-ANCHORED; SEES RISKS TO PRICE STABILITY ECB'S NAGEL: ECB MUST NOT FALL BEHIND THE CURVE AS THAT COULD REQUIRE BIGGER RATE HIKES LATER WITH GREATER ECONOMIC COST
- From @DailyFXTeam|Jun 23, 2022|4 comments
tweet at 10:29am: Fed's Powell: - We have an unconditional commitment to fighting inflation - The labor market is unsustainably hot tweet at 10:29am: POWELL: SIGNIFICANTLY MORE CHALLENGING TO BRING DOWN INFLATION WITHOUT IMPACTING THE LABOR MARKET tweet at 10:35am: FED'S POWELL Q&A: SOME OF INFL IS OUT OF FED'S CONTROL, LIKE ENERGY; EUROPEAN COUNTRIES HAVE VARYING HIGH RATES OF INFLATION; FED HAS TOOLS VS DEMAND #Powell #federalreserve tweet at 10:36am: Fed's Powell: - The impact of shrinking the balance sheet will be marginal compared to impact of rising interest rates - US inflation is a consequence of very strong demand tweet at 10:42am: POWELL: OUR INTENTION IS TO ACHIEVE A SOFT LANDING POWELL: PATH TO DO THAT HAS GOTTEN MORE AND MORE CHALLENGING
- From youtube.com/cnbctelevision|Jun 23, 2022|5 comments
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Thursday testifies before the House Financial Services Committee on the U.S. monetary policy and the state of the economy.
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- From bnnbloomberg.ca|Jun 23, 2022|2 comments
Investment bankers in the US and Europe are bracing for potentially billions of dollars in total losses on big-ticket leveraged buyouts as they struggle to offload risky corporate ...
- From federalreserve.gov|Jun 23, 2022|3 comments
Thank you to the Massachusetts Bankers Association for the opportunity to speak to you today. It is often good to get away from Washington to gain some perspective, and it's always worthwhile for me when I can get some perspective from bankers. I will touch on some of the banking issues I expect are on your minds, but one of the biggest issues for everyone right now is inflation, what the Fed is doing to get inflation under control, and the implications for your businesses, your customers, and your communities. Inflation is the highest we have seen in the United States in 40 years and so far it shows little sign of moderating. At the same time, the economy is growing at a moderate pace, and the labor market is extremely tight, as indicated by a variety of measures including reports of many employers unable to find workers despite significantly raising wages. That tightness is contributing to inflation, because labor is the largest input cost for producing goods and providing services. Inflation is a significant challenge for everyone, but it hits lower- and moderate-income people the hardest, since they spend a larger share of their incomes on necessities and often have less savings to fall back on. Inflation is also a burden for businesses that must somehow balance unpredictable costs while setting prices that aren't so high that they discourage customers from purchasing. Inflation that continues at these levels is a threat to sustained employment growth and to the overall health of the economy. The inflation data show that, afte tweet at 11:00am: FED'S BOWMAN: ANOTHER 75 BPS RATE HIKE WILL BE APPROPRIATE IN JULY, AND HIKES OF AT LEAST 50 BPS AT NEXT FEW SUBSEQUENT MEETINGS.
- From marketpulse.com|Jun 23, 2022
It continues to be a quiet week for the British pound. That could change on Friday, with the markets bracing for more bad news from retail sales data for May. Headline retail ...
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- Posted: Jun 23, 2022 10:45am
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- From dol.gov|Jun 23, 2022