Date | 1:10pm | Currency | Impact | Detail | Actual | Forecast | Previous | Graph | ||
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1:10pm | Actual | |||||||||
Mon May 20 | ||||||||||
Mon May 20 | 12:30am | JPY | Tertiary Industry Activity m/m | -2.4% | 0.1% | 2.2% | ||||
All Day | CHF | Bank Holiday | ||||||||
All Day | EUR | French Bank Holiday | ||||||||
All Day | EUR | German Bank Holiday | ||||||||
5:00am | GBP | MPC Member Broadbent Speaks | ||||||||
7:30am | USD | FOMC Member Bostic Speaks | ||||||||
All Day | CAD | Bank Holiday | ||||||||
8:45am | USD | FOMC Member Bostic Speaks | ||||||||
9:00am | USD | FOMC Member Waller Speaks | ||||||||
USD | FOMC Member Barr Speaks | |||||||||
10:30am | USD | FOMC Member Jefferson Speaks | ||||||||
2:00pm | USD | FOMC Member Mester Speaks | ||||||||
8:30pm | AUD | Westpac Consumer Sentiment | -2.4% | |||||||
9:30pm | AUD | Monetary Policy Meeting Minutes | ||||||||
11:00pm | NZD | Credit Card Spending y/y | 1.4% |
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Imagine you have $400 to spend on a luxury dining experience. You might treat yourself to a tin of premium caviar, a bottle or two of very fine wine or a multi-course meal at a ...
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post: Fed Vice Chair Barr: Q1 Inflation “Disappointing,” Did Not Provide the Confidence Needed to Ease MonPol Barr: Fed Will Need to Allow Tight Policy “Further Time to Continue to Do Its Work” Barr: Fed in a Good Position to “Hold Steady” and Watch Economy post: FED'S BARR: REGULATORS ARE CONSIDERING REQUIRING LARGER BANKS TO HOLD MINIMUM LEVELS OF RESERVES AND PRE-POSITIONED COLLATERAL AT DISCOUNT WINDOW.Barr: On Building a Resilient Regulatory Framework Thank you for inviting me to speak today. As many of you know, I have two roles at the Federal Reserve—my role as a governor of the Board and member of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), where I participate in developing and setting monetary policy, and my role as the Vice Chair for Supervision, where I oversee our supervision and regulation of the banking sector. In keeping with the interdisciplinary spirit of this conference, I'll touch upon these different roles, and how they both promote a healthy economy. To start, I will share a couple of observations about the current stance of monetary policy. Then, I'll discuss the conceptual framework that underpins the key components of prudential bank regulations.1 As part of this discussion, I will also offer some observations about adjustments to our regulatory framework that we are exploring, including as a result of lessons learned from the bank stress in the spring of 2023.
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post: Fed’s Bostic: Data for First Part of Years on Inflation Have Been Very Bumpy - Bloomberg Television Fed’s Bostic: Going to Take a While Before We’re Certain Inflation’s Going Back Down to 2% Fed’s Bostic: Business Leaders Tell Me Things Are Slowing Down, but Very Slowly post: FED'S BOSTIC: OUR NEW STEADY STATE ON INTEREST RATES IS LIKELY TO BE HIGHER THAN WHAT PEOPLE HAVE BEEN USED TO FOR PAST DECADE post: FED'S BOSTIC: MY OUTLOOK IS THAT INFLATION WILL CONTINUE TO FALL THIS YEAR AND INTO 2025. post: FED'S BOSTIC: RISKS ARE REALLY BALANCED RIGHT NOW post: FED'S BOSTIC: FIRMS TELL ME THAT THE LABOR MARKET IS WEAKER THAN LAST YEAR, BUT NOT SOFT.
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post: BoE Broadbent : Possible Bank Rate Could Be Cut In Summer - Policy More Restrictive Now Than In H1 2023 - Less Restrictive Rates Depend On Data Evolving - Policy Will Have To Become Less Restrictive - Rates Will Be Less Restrictive At Some Point
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San Francisco Fed president Mary Daly told Axios on Friday that it's not clear whether inflation is definitively receding and there is no "urgency" to adjust interest rates. Why it matters: Inflation cooled for the first time in 2024 last month, relieving economists that progress might not have stalled out. But one month of data has not convinced Fed officials that price pressures are evaporating in a way that puts near-term interest rates back on the table. What they're saying: "Fortunately, policy is in a very good place. We are in what I call the ready position," Daly told Axios at the University of San Francisco. "We can adjust policy as we need to." • Earlier this month, the Fed acknowledged signs that progress on inflation had stalled. That's raised questions about whether decades-high interest rates might need to be pushed up further to wrestle inflation down. post: FED'S DALY: I AM NOT YET CONFIDENT INFLATION COMING DOWN SUSTAINABLY TO 2%. post: FED'S DALY: I EXPECT IMPROVEMENT IN SHELTER INFLATION, JUST NOT RAPIDLY.