Although this may be a desirable
outcome for any central bank, many are learning just how hard that can be.
Not exact matches
NEW YORK, May 2 - The U.S. dollar held below 3 - 1 / 2 - month highs on Wednesday as investors awaited the
outcome of a Federal Reserve meeting
for indications on the U.S.
central banks future interest rate path.
The recognition that growth / employment
outcomes were an important consideration
for the
central bank was initially seen as setting the RBA apart from other inflation - targeting
central banks where the rhetoric (at least) reinforced the primacy of price stability.
-LRB-...) One reading of this extraordinary
outcome is that it was a protest against the painful spending cuts, tax increases, and economic reforms that Monti's government implemented as a precondition (albeit an unstated one)
for European
Central Bank support.
The greatest
outcome of the meeting was an agreement that the European
Central Bank would eventually be in charge of all
banking supervision
for the Eurozone.
It is safe to say we are cautiously optimistic on the financial markets in 2018 and think the math works
for the markets as long as tax reform has the desired
outcome and
central banks don't overstep.
Furthermore, the trader must be able to analyze macroeconomics accounting principles, such as a
central bank's level of reserves, current / capital account surpluses and deficits, as well as study the causes and outcomes of speculative attacks on currency, for example, the Bank of England, Mexican and Thai currency debacles make for interesting case stud
bank's level of reserves, current / capital account surpluses and deficits, as well as study the causes and
outcomes of speculative attacks on currency,
for example, the
Bank of England, Mexican and Thai currency debacles make for interesting case stud
Bank of England, Mexican and Thai currency debacles make
for interesting case studies.
«[
Central banks] have chosen implicitly, if not in a more overt fashion, to set capital and other reserve standards
for banks to guard against
outcomes that exclude those once or twice in a century crises that threaten the stability of our domestic and international financial systems.
Not only are
central banks the ultimate back - stop
for market stability (although that is an entirely separate Narrative), but also they are the immediate arbiters of market
outcomes.