The Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics will on Tuesday publish the delayed employment report for November and a partial update for October, which will not include the unemployment rate and ...
While the coming recession should not rival the Great Depression, it is expected to be deeper and more prolonged than the ...
U.S. payrolls are expected to have climbed by a tepid 35,000 in November, according to a Reuters poll. Fed Chair Jerome ...
The AI-driven capex boom by hyperscalers has delayed a recession despite aggressive Fed tightening and historic yield curve ...
Gold (XAU/USD) advances during the North American session on Friday, poised to finish the week almost flat above the $4,200 ...
As the Federal Reserve prepares to end Quantitative Tightening (QT), the bitcoin price stands at a critical macroeconomic ...
Everyone is gloomy about America’s jobs market. Investors talk of a “K-shaped" economy, in which growth is buoyed by an ...
It’s not a matter of if the next recession comes, but when. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent recently warned that “sections of the economy” are already showing signs of strain — and that if the ...
In a recent Moody’s Analytics report detailed by Realtor.com, a somewhat grim scenario emerged for nearly half of U.S. states — according to Moody’s, those states were either embroiled in a recession ...
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the U.S. housing market is one subset of the economy that may be in recession because of high interest rates as he continues to call for the Fed to cut rates.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said some sectors were in a recession as he argued for more interest rate cuts. By Alan Rappeport and Colby Smith Alan Rappeport covers the U.S. Treasury Department.