- Story Log
| User | Time | Action Performed |
|---|---|---|
-
US durable goods orders up by 2.9% in August
Durable goods orders in the United States increased by 2.9% in August compared to the previous month, amounting to $312.1 billion, according to a report published by the Census Bureau on Thursday. The rise was led by orders of transportation equipment, which jumped 7.9%. Excluding transportation, new orders added 0.4% month-on-month. Excluding defense, they were up by 1.9%. Meanwhile, shipments of durable goods declined by 0.2% to $307.5 billion.
- Comments / Top
- Subscribe
-
- Older Stories
From @DeItaone|Sep 25, 2025FED'S GOOLSBEE: JOB MARKET SEEMS TO BE COOLING, INFLATION IS GOING UP Fed's Goolsbee: Rates can go down a fair bit more if inflation heads toward 2%, but I'm wary of frontloading rate cuts. FED'S GOOLSBEE: RATES CAN DROP FURTHER IF STAGFLATION RISK FADES CHI FED'S GOOLSBEE Q&A/CRAIN'S: HAVING INFLATION GOAL AT 2% 'SUPER IMPORTANT;' DON'T CONSIDER CHANGING WHILE HAVEN'T REACHED CURRENT TARGET #Goolsbee #FederalReserve #economy GOOLSBEE: IF SITTING GOVT CAN TELL CENTRAL BANK WHAT TO DO WITH RATES, INFLATION GOES UP CRITICALLY IMPORTANT FOR FED TO REMAIN INDEPENDENT
From dol.gov|Sep 25, 2025|2 commentsIn the week ending September 20, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 218,000, a decrease of 14,000 from the previous week's revised level. The previous ...
- From bea.gov|Sep 25, 2025|49 comments
Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 3.8 percent in the second quarter of 2025 (April, May, and June), according to the third estimate released by the ...
-
- Newer Stories
From kansascityfed.org|Sep 25, 2025Thank you for the invitation to join you this morning. I appreciate the opportunity to speak with you, and I look forward to our discussion. I will spend most of my time speaking about the Fed’s role as a supervisor and regulator of the nation’s banking system, but with the recent Federal Open Market Committee meeting attracting much attention, I will first offer a few words on last week’s monetary policy decision and my thoughts on the outlook for policy going forward. As I am sure you are all aware, the FOMC lowered its target policy rate by 25 basis points last week. I supported this decision. Let me explain my thinking. In setting policy, I, like other members of the FOMC, am guided by the Fed’s congressionally determined dual mandate of price stability and full employment. Currently, we are close to meeting this mandate, and as close as we have been for some time. Inflation is running around 2½ percent, which is above but near the Fed’s 2 percent definition of price stability. Looking through the effects of declining energy prices, inflation has been closer to 3 percent. The unemployment rate in August was 4.3 percen *SCHMID: INFLATION REMAINS TOO HIGH, LABOR MKT. STILL IN BALANCE *FED'S SCHMID SAYS LABOR MARKET SHOWED RISK OF ABRUPT WEAKENING *SCHMID: QUARTER-POINT CUT WAS REASONABLE RISK-MANAGEMENT MOVE Fed's Schmid: Fed policy is slightly restrictive; which is the right place to be. Fed's Schmid: Going forward will be data-dependent on monetary policy choices
From apnews.com|Sep 25, 2025|13 commentsThe U.S. economy expanded at a surprising 3.8% from April through June, the government reported in a dramatic upgrade of its previous estimate of second-quarter growth. U.S. gross ...
From cnbc.com|Sep 25, 2025|22 commentsInitial claims for unemployment insurance were well below expectations last week, helping to douse caution at the Federal Reserve and elsewhere that the labor market is in danger. ...
- Device
- URL
- Screenshot Press CTRL+V
- You have reached the maximum number of attachments allowed per post.
- Attached Images
- Attached Files