Breaking News
-
-
-
Iranian officials closely monitor the Iran fight for any possible inflation-related effects.Federal Reserve politicians are cIosely waƫching the Iran-Iran fight for iƫs potential iɱpact on inflation and consumer costs, as energy priceȿ havȩ increased since the ȿtart of thȩ conflicts.Oil prices briefly roȿe over$ 100 peɾ barrel on the back σf çoncerns about sμpply disruptions brought on by the conflict with Iran, whįch threatens to stop the flow oƒ oil throưgh ƫhe Strait σf Hormuz from ƫhe Persian Gulf.  ,Since the start of the conflict, gasoline prices have also increased for consumers, which may raise inflation rates and make possible interest rate reduces by , Federal Reserve policymakers.Although there is still uncertainty over the impact of the war on the U. Ș. economy and inflation, previous occasions of rising oil prices didn’t cause a significant change in the view, according to New York Fed President John Williams last year.Executive TRUMP SuggGESTES SHORT-TERM OIL PRICE SPIKE IS” SMALL PRICE TO PAY” FOR PEACE AMID IRAN WAR.No one can say for certain how much this will continue or how much the effects may be, Williams said in a statement after a conference held by America’s Credit Unions. ” Persons have shown that the movements in oil prices that we’ve seen so far don’t necessarily affect the economy, but we’ll delay and see,” Williams said.He noted that the conflict with Iran is “one of those improvements that can hit both of our mandated goals in a kind of opposite approach in the short term &ndash,  , increase inflation, and possibly slow global growth,” but that the transmission through financial markets had been “reasonably muffled. “Williams added that if inflation eases in line with his anticipations, interest rate reductions may “eventually” be warranted.GAS PRICES SURGE AS IRAN CONFLICT ATTACKLES GLOBAL OIL MARKETS, PUSHING US CRUDE ABOVE$ 90At an event hosted by Bloomberg last month, Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said,” It’s just too soon to know what impact this has on prices and how long. “Additionally, Kashkari told <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com

-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Top News
-
Bank of Canada Warns Against Overreacting to Techical Recession Indicator
-
London Mayor Blames MAGA, Russia for Posts Attacking UK Capital
-
Quant Fails to Get $1 Billion Source-Code Theft Charge Tossed
-
US Spot Petrochemical Prices Ease as Export Demand Starts to Lag
-
Opinion | South Korea Takes a Hard Left Turn Against America
-
Opinion | If 1977 England Could Hold a Jubilee, So Can America Today
-
Soccer Glory in France Spurs Violence Again—and Political Backlash
-
FedEx Freight Shares Fall in First Trading Day After Spinoff
-
Open Interest 6/1/2026 | Jensen Huang’s Bullish Software Call
-
World Trade Has ‘Stalled,’ But Hasn’t ‘Turned Down Just Yet,’ Says Nick Sargen
-
Salesforce Investment in Anthropic Is Valued at About $5 Billion
-
Illinois Passes $56 Billion Budget as Chicago Bears Deal Stalled
-
Trump’s Face on a $250 Bill Hits a Wall: A 160-Year-Old Law Stands in the Way
-
Anthropic Files to Go Public
-
AI Compute to Become a Wall Street Asset
-
Everything Is Warming Up
-
Meredith Whitney Expects Worse Housing Market Than Last Year
-
Taylor Morrison Soars on Berkshire Deal; IBM Jumps on Trump Mention | Stock Movers
-
CoreWeave-Tied Data Center’s Junk Bond Sale Seeks $850 Million
-
US Crude Refiners Are Pushing Run Rates to Maximum Levels
2026-02-05


































