- Story Log
User | Time | Action Performed |
---|---|---|
-
ECB’s Nagel: Not So Sure We Should Become Buyer of Last Resort
- Comments
- Subscribe
-
- Older Stories
post: *Fed’s Mester: Undertightening Would Be Worse Than Overtightening post: FED'S MESTER: INFLATION IS STILL TOO HIGH. post: *Fed’s Mester Says She Has Base Case of Soft Landing in Projections post: FED'S MESTER: WE NEED TO SEE MODERATION IN THE LABOR MARKET, WAGE GROWTH. post: *Fed’s Mester: We See No Evidence of a Wage-Price Spiral
EMA stands for exponential moving average. It’s a simple indicator that charts the price of a security over time. EMAs are often calculated in 10, 50 and 200-day moving averages. ...
post: FED'S GOOLSBEE SAYS INFLATION RATE STILL HIGHER THAN WE WANT post: FED'S GOOLSBEE: WE HAVE TO KEEP GETTING GOOD NEWS ON INFLATION. post: *Fed’s Goolsbee: No Evidence of Wage-Price Spiral at This Point post: Fed’s Goolsbee: Would Need To Meet `High Bar' To Change Plan On QT - BBG TV
-
- Newer Stories
post: *ECB’s Kazaks: In No Rush to Say That We Are Done on Rates *ECB’s Kazaks: Core Inflation Still Elevated *ECB’s Kazaks: Picture of European Economy is Quite Mixed post: ECB'S KAZAKS: STILL WOULD ERR ON SIDE OF RAISING RATES KAZAKS: A RATE PAUSE WOULDN'T MEAN STOPPING post: ECB'S KAZAKS: STOPPING TOO EARLY IS A BIGGER PROBLEM THAN CUTTING. post: ECB’s Kazaks: Labour Market Is Reason For Concern Over Inflation - BBG TV
Watching coverage of the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) summit in South Africa this week made us wonder why the members of the BRICS decided to name the ...
post: ECB'S PRESIDENT LAGARDE: THE ECB ARE TO SET RATES AS HIGH AS NECESSARY FOR INFLATION.Lagarde: Policymaking in an age of shifts and breaks Over the past three years, people around the world have experienced an unprecedented series of shocks, albeit to varying degrees. We have faced the pandemic, resulting in a partial shutdown of the global economy. We are confronting a war in Europe and a new geopolitical landscape, leading to profound changes in energy markets and trade patterns. And climate change is accelerating, compelling us to do all we can to decarbonise the economy. One visible impact of these shifts has been the return of high inflation globally, which has caused anguish for many people. Central banks have responded by tightening monetary policy and, while progress is being made, the fight against inflation is not yet won. But these shifts could also have profound longer-term implications. There are plausible scenarios where we could see a fundamental change in the nature of global economic interactions. In other words, we may be entering an age of shifts in economic relationships and breaks in established regularities. For policymakers with a stability mandate, this poses a significant challenge . We rely on past regularities to understand the distrib post: ECB'S LAGARDE: WE ARE LIKELY TO EXPERIENCE MORE SHOCKS EMANATING FROM THE SUPPLY SIDE ITSELF post: ECB'S LAGARDE: WE NEED TO SET RATES AT SUFFICIENTLY RESTRICTIVE LEVELS FOR AS LONG AS NECESSARY TO ACHIEVE A TIMELY RETURN OF INFLATION TO OUR 2% MEDIUM-TERM TARGET. post: ECB'S LAGARDE: WE ALSO NEED TO BE OPEN TO THE POSSIBILITY THAT SOME OF THESE CHANGES COULD BE LONGER-LASTING.
- Story Stats
- Posted: Aug 25, 2023 2:37pm
- Submitted by:Category: Low Impact Breaking NewsComments: 0 / Views: 2,975
- Linked event: