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From think.ing.com|Jul 10, 2025|2 commentsUS President Donald Trump's fiscal policies, including the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) and new tariffs, are set to have significant implications for the US federal deficit ...
From bnnbloomberg.ca|Jul 10, 2025Global copper traders are offering cargoes to Chinese buyers as they look to offload metal no longer able to reach the U.S. before U.S. President Donald Trump’s 50 per cent copper ...
From think.ing.com|Jul 10, 2025|5 comments2025 and 2026 consensus forecasts for GDP growth have fallen from 2.2% to 1.5% since the start of the year, with the consumer at the heart of the problem. Sentiment has soured and ...
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From puprime.com|Jul 10, 2025Silver holds value both as a precious metal and an industrial resource, making it a popular choice for investors seeking diversification or a hedge against inflation. Silver ETFs, ...
From youtube.com/dallasfed|Jul 10, 2025The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas and the World Affairs Council of Dallas/Fort Worth will host a conversation with Governor Christopher J. Waller of the Federal Reserve Board of ...
From @LiveSquawk|Jul 10, 2025|4 commentsFed’s Waller: US Central Bank Likely Has Some Ways To Go In Shrinking The Size Of Its Holdings - Hypothetical $5.8T Balance Sheet Might Be Right Level To Aim For Vs Current $6.7T - $2.7T In Reserves Might Be Right Level To Aim For Vs Current $3.3T - Fed's Balance Sheet May Not… Fed's Waller: The Fed's balance sheet may not need to shrink as much as some expect.
Demystifying the Federal Reserve's Balance Sheet Thank you, Lorie. Let me start by expressing my deepest condolences to the families and loved ones of those harmed by the flooding in the Hill Country. I cannot imagine the pain and anguish they are feeling. My prayers go out to all those affected. Turning to my remarks for today, thank you also for the opportunity to speak to you about the Fed's balance sheet, one of the more complex, and, I believe, misunderstood aspects of the Federal Reserve's role as a central bank.1 To level set the conversation, let me start with some simple facts. In August of 2007 our balance sheet was around $870 billion, equal to approximately 6 percent of nominal gross domestic product (GDP). Today it is around $6.7 trillion, with a t, which is about 22 percent of GDP. This is down significantly from its maximum size of nearly $9 trillion in early 2022 but still quite large. Since nominal GDP has essentially doubled since 2007, if our balance sheet had grown at the same rate, it would be around $1.7 trillion today—not $6.7 trillion. An obvious question is why our balance sheet is so much larger than economic growth would have predicted. As an aside, let me point out that there is no consensus among economists about how large a central bank balance sheet should be, but it is logical to ask: if monetary policy worked when the balance sheet was 6 percent of GDP, why is it, and perhaps needs to be, proportionally so much larger now? A major reason is that the Federal Reserve embarked on two major balance sheet policy initiatives over the past twenty years to respond to urgent problems in the economy. First, we engaged in quantitative easing, or QE, to provide support to the economy after the advent of the Global Financial Crisis and then again with the COVID-19 pandemic. Second, we consciously changed our im
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- Jul 10, 2025 12:02pm Posted by
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