- Story Log
| User | Time | Action Performed |
|---|---|---|
-
Fed's Hammack: 'A little bit nervous' about current policy given inflation; I would not want to cut rates into accommodative territory
FED'S HAMMACK: 'A LITTLE BIT NERVOUS' ABOUT CURRENT POLICY GIVEN INFLATION
— *Walter Bloomberg (@DeItaone) November 6, 2025
FED'S HAMMACK: I WOULD NOT WANT TO CUT RATES INTO ACCOMMODATIVE TERRITORY
- Comments / Top
- Subscribe
-
- Older Stories
From @financialjuice|Nov 6, 2025|35 commentsTrump: It would be devastating if the Supreme Court rules against tariffs.
From youtube.com/whitehouse|Nov 6, 2025|11 commentsPresident Donald Trump speaks live from the Oval Office in Washington, D.C. Watch his full remarks.
From @DeItaone|Nov 6, 2025FED’S HAMMACK: 'NOT OBVIOUS' U.S. CENTRAL BANK SHOULD CUT INTEREST RATES AGAIN GIVEN INFLATION Fed's Hammack: It will take two to three years to get inflation back to 2%. FED'S HAMMACK: MONETARY POLICY IS 'ONLY BARELY RESTRICTIVE, IF AT ALL'
Balancing Act: The Dual Mandate on an Economic Tightrope My thanks to the Economic Club of New York for inviting me to speak today and to Bill Dudley for moderating what I’m sure will be an engaging discussion. As many of you know, I lived and worked in New York for 30 years before moving to Cleveland to begin my new role at the Federal Reserve. I love Cleveland, and I love talking with friends and neighbors about all the great things to see and do in Northeast Ohio. But I have to chuckle when the topic turns to Cleveland traffic, which is nothing compared to the endless gridlock that I experienced in Manhattan—before congestion pricing kicked in, of course. Some of you might be thinking, just take the subway! If only the decision were that simple. When I lived in New York, I faced the daily debate about the comfort of a cab or the certainty of subway timing. But even once in the subway, I faced the maddening choice: do I jump on the local 1 train pulling into the station or wait for the express 3 train that says it’s four minutes away? Getting around New York is a balancing act to optimize every second of every day, and right now a balancing act feels like the perfect metaphor for monetary policy: If the economy is a tightrope, policymakers are tasked with walking a fine line to keep our dual mandate goals of maximum employment and price stability in balance. Today I’m going to talk about why I believe policy should be at a mildly restrictive setting to strike the right balance between our goals. But let me stress the “I” part of that sentence and indicate, as always, that these are only my views and not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve System or of my colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC).
-
- Newer Stories
From @LiveSquawk|Nov 6, 2025|1 commentFed's Miran: I Expect We Will Cut In December - I Want To Get To Neutral In 50 BPS Increments; A Lot Of My Colleagues Want 25 Bps Increments MIRAN: DON'T NEED 75 BASIS POINT CUT, DON'T NEED TO MAKE UP FOR LOST GROUND ON CUTS
From kitco.com|Nov 6, 2025U.S. gold demand rose 58% compared to Q3 2024, while North American ETF inflows reached $16bn and trading volumes surged, according to the Q3 Gold Demand Trends report from the ...
From finance.yahoo.com|Nov 6, 2025Gold steadied as traders weighed comments from Federal Reserve officials as well as data showing a dramatic weakening in the US jobs market, raising the prospect of lower interest ...
- Story Stats
- Nov 6, 2025 11:30am Posted by
Low Impact Breaking
34,864 - Linked events:
- Device
- URL
- Screenshot Press CTRL+V
- You have reached the maximum number of attachments allowed per post.
- Attached Images
- Attached Files