The annual rate of inflation accelerated sharply to 2.6 per cent in February as the federal government's temporary tax break came to an end mid-month, Statistics Canada said Tuesday.
High interest rates are no longer the main fear. Rather, investors are worried about slowing growth and trade disruptions from President Donald Trump's tariffs ...
When inflation surged in 2022, it was relatively easy to predict central bankers’ next moves: the argument for rising interest rates was clear and relatively unambiguous. Today, trade offs are far ...
The Federal Reserve is widely expected to hold interest rates steady when it meets this week, but investors will be watching for something else — any sign that President Trump's policies are changing ...
The Fed faces challenges in cutting rates due to the uncertain impacts of tariffs and inflation expectations. Read more on ...
The latest University of Michigan U.S. consumer sentiment survey revealed that year-ahead inflation expectations increased drastically to 4.3% in February — the highest reading since November 2023.
The prospect of a so-called ‘Trumpcession’ seems to be increasing by the day, but will there actually be a US recession?
Stripping out more volatile food and energy prices, the core CPI also moderated, coming in at 0.2 percent in February. That ...
Inflation slowed during President Donald Trump’s first full month in office, but that progress could be short-lived as ...
Inflation came in cooler for February. That could give Federal Reserve officials extra confidence that price pressures were ...
CPI drops to 2.8% with falling fuel and food prices, but core inflation stays high. Click for a full review of the inflation ...
Cooler-than-forecast February inflation pushed stocks higher after two days of heavy losses. A kneejerk rally in bonds ...