Trump, Inflation and Fed
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Trump, Republicans and climate bill
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April's inflation report will be welcome news to the FOMC—but that doesn't mean the Powell-led group will cut interest rates.
Consumer prices rose 2.3% in April compared to a year ago, cooling slightly from the previous month and defying fears of an inflation surge in the aftermath of President Donald Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs last month. The reading -- which marked the lowest inflation rate since 2021 -- matched economists' expectations.
The dollar fell amid speculation that President Trump could seek agreements with other countries to devalue the dollar as part of trade deals. Reports that the U.S. and South Korea discussed exchange rate polices last week "should be enough to set a few alarm bells ringing" and clearly did given the dollar's negative reaction,
Investors eye more trade deals, updates from President Trump’s trip to the Middle East and fresh consumer inflation data after U.S. stocks soared Monday as investors celebrated major progress on U.S.-China trade talks.
1dOpinion
The Western Journal on MSNBreaking: New Inflation Numbers Crush Democrats' Narrative About Trump's Tariff StrategyWell, well, well, look who's eating crow now. Democrats and their media cheerleaders have been wailing for months that President Donald Trump’s tariff policies would ignite a wildfire of inflation, scorching American wallets.
American consumers, battle-scarred by the pandemic and the subsequent surge in inflation, are already changing their spending patterns and delaying some purchases due to President Donald Trump’s chaotic tariff policy and the broader economic uncertainty,
The White House has said its agreements with the U.K. and China are starting points, but so far the Trump administration has given up more than it has gained.
Annualized inflation eased to a 2.3 percent pace, the lowest since early 2021. But the month-to-month pace of inflation increased.