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US Year-Ahead Inflation Views Rise for First Time Since March
US year-ahead inflation expectations rose in early October for the first time in seven months and the long-term outlook also crept up, a potentially worrisome development for the Federal Reserve as it tries to keep views anchored. Consumers expect prices will climb 5.1% over the next year, up from 4.7% in September, according to a survey from the University of Michigan. They see costs rising at an annual rate of 2.9% over the next five to 10 years, a pickup from 2.7%, data Friday showed. The University of Michigan’s preliminary sentiment index increased to a six-month high of 59.8 in October, reflecting an ... (full story)
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- From federalreserve.gov|Oct 14, 2022|1 comment
Thank you, Professor Jackson, and thank you to the Harvard National Security Journal for the invitation to speak at this symposium. As the payment system continues to evolve rapidly and the volume of digital assets continues to grow, it is critical to ensure that we keep both the benefits and risks of digital assets in the policy conversation, including the implications for America's role in the global economy and its place in the world. My speech today focuses on exactly this issue and on an aspect of the digital asset world that is now the center of domestic and international attention—central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) and how they relate to the substantial international role of the U.S. dollar.1 In January 2022, the Federal Reserve Board published a discussion paper on CBDCs to foster a broad and transparent public dialogue, including the potential benefits and risks of a U.S. CBDC.2 To date, no decisions have been made by the Board on whether to move forward with a CBDC. But my views are well known. As I have said before, I am highly skeptical of whether there is a compelling need for the Fed to create a digital currency.3 I am not a national security expert. But one area where economics, CBDCs, and national security dovetail is the role of the dollar. Advocates for creating a U.S. CBDC often assert how it is important to the long-term status of the dollar, particularly if other major jurisdictions adopt a CBDC. I disagree. As I will discuss, the underlying reasons for why the dollar is the dominant currency have little to do with technology, and I believe the introduction of a CBDC would not affect those underlying reasons. I offer this view, again, in the spirit of dialogue, knowing how tweet at 12:15pm: Fed’s Waller: I Disagree That Creating a U.S. Central Bank Digital Currency Is Important to Long-Term Status of Dollar - Don’t Think There Are CBDC Implications for the Role of the U.S. in Global Economy, Financial System tweet at 12:15pm: Fed’s Waller: Debate on CBDC Should Center on Financial Stability, Improvements to Payments System, Financial Inclusion https://t.co/Yaz6EBbcvy
- From bnnbloomberg.ca|Oct 14, 2022|4 comments
Federal Reserve officials are likely to once again raise their outlook for how high they’ll have to lift interest rates following the latest bout of bad inflation news. Several ...
- From cnbc.com|Oct 14, 2022
Consumer spending was flat in September as prices moved sharply higher and the Federal Reserve implemented higher interest rates to slow the economy, according to government ...
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- From @sevenloI|Oct 14, 2022|1 comment
tweet at 1:39pm: U.S. Treasury’s Yellen: - Seeing Swings in Capital Flows and ‘Strong Movements’ in Capital Markets - Attentive to Spillovers of Macroeconomic Tightening From Advanced Economies to the Rest of the World tweet at 1:39pm: US TREASURY SECRETARY YELLEN: INFLATION IS HIGH IN MANY COUNTRIES, AND GLOBAL GROWTH IS SLOWING. tweet at 1:49pm: US Treasury’s Yellen: - Debt Problems Growing More Acute for Low-Income Countries - One Barrier to Progress on Debt Issues Is ‘Predator’ Country China
- From think.ing.com|Oct 14, 2022
The US September retail sales report is not terrible, but it doesn’t exactly instill confidence either. Headline sales came in on the softer side at 0% month-on-month versus ...
- From fxstreet.com|Oct 14, 2022
The EUR/USD losses its grip around the 20-day EMA and edges lower as the North American session progresses, amidst a firm US dollar, following the release of a US hot inflation ...
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- Posted: Oct 14, 2022 12:57pm
- Submitted by:Category: Fundamental AnalysisComments: 0 / Views: 869
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