🔒 Wall Street’s high-stakes, all-or-nothing bets on economy’s resilience amid inflation battle
Wall Street traders are making bold bets on the U.S. economy surviving Jerome Powell’s inflation battle, triggering a speculative frenzy.
Wall Street traders are making bold bets on the U.S. economy surviving Jerome Powell’s inflation battle, triggering a speculative frenzy.
Global investors begin to rethink their strategies as the prospects of US rates hitting 6% become more real.
Once seen as the world’s go-to Âeconomic crisis fighters, central bankers are now desperately trying to contain a problem they allowed to happen: inflation.
The bearish stance comes even as recent data on employment as well as consumer and producer prices suggest the US central bank may actually succeed in its high-wire mission to ramp up borrowing costs without crashing the business cycle.
A slowdown in inflation is strengthening the case for the Federal Reserve to slow its pace of interest-rate hikes.Â
The Bank of England delivered its biggest interest rate increase in 33 years but strongly pushed back against market expectations for the scale of future hikes.
Bob Michele, a bond market veteran with decades of experience, will shelter in short-dated investment grade bonds in the coming downturn.
JPMorgan is embarking on a high-stakes task of predicting market moves based on an event that has largely been positive for stocks this year.
Looking beyond her rocky start, Janet Yellen reflects on inflation and the cognitive biases that affect policy makers and markets.
US consumer inflation excluding energy and food accelerated to a new four-decade high in September as prices continued to surge.