Trump, Powell and Deutsche Bank
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Trump, EU and tariffs
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The independence of central banks, which allows policymakers to operate free from political meddling, is considered sacrosanct by investors and economists.
As a Harvard professor, Elizabeth Warren rang the alarm bell in the lead up to the 2008 financial crisis. Now a veteran senator, she is ringing that bell again.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s cabinet overhaul this week was part of an effort to move into position presidential loyalists who can potentially win favor with Donald Trump.
Jr. and Omeed Malik rang the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange as renegades. They had just turned PublicSquare, a Yelp-like directory of con
The University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey shows vibes around the economy far below historic norms, but they're "inching up."
For investors, the risk now is that the slow drip of news on tariffs leads to complacency about the damage they might cause-the Nasdaq stock index closed a record high yesterday.
President Trump signed the stablecoin bill at a flashy ceremony attended by industry leaders, just a day after the legislation was passed by Congress.
16hOpinion
Money Talks News on MSNTrump's 1% Rate Demand: Crisis-Level Policy for a Healthy EconomyYour high-yield savings account could plummet to zero under Trump's plan for emergency-level interest rates. The proposal raises questions about Fed independence and could trigger inflation fears in bond markets.
Taken together, the impact of President Trump’s whirlwind six months back in office is showing up in the economy.The effect isn’t yet enough to derail the economy, which by many measures has weathered Trump’s trade wars much better than many on Wall Street and in Washington feared.
Last week, the president enacted a sprawling set of tax cuts that he believes to be the ingredients for rapid economic growth, even as fiscal experts warned that the law may injure the poor while putting the U.S. government on a risky new fiscal path.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite ended little changed on Friday, overcoming a brief dip triggered by a Financial Times report indicating U.S. President Donald Trump was pushing for steep new tariffs on European Union products.