Having just raised interest rates at their last meeting, the Fed has no plans to follow up in May but Fed fund futures show a 93 % chance of a quarter point rate hike the following month
when economic projections are updated and Jerome Powell holds a press conference.
Not exact matches
In those happier
economic times,
when Muhammad Ali was still the world's best - known Muslim,
projections for the ultra-luxury car market were rosy.
On the Friday before Christmas,
when most Canadians were busy with their last minute shopping, the Department of Finance quietly released its «Update of Long - Term
Economic and Fiscal
Projections».
These requirements do not force complete balance on an annual basis: they generally focus on budget
projections rather than realizations, so deficits can still occur
when economic conditions are unexpectedly weak.
Markets, however, are clearly taking Powell's comments as a sign that his view on the economy will be upgraded notably
when the Fed's next set of
economic projections is released in just over two weeks.
As a result, the Bank of Canada's current stance to leave interest rates unchanged given its concerns about the country's lacklustre
economic growth could be an important catalyst for preferred share performance going forward — especially
when combined with the U.S. Federal Reserve's
projections for multiple rate hikes this year.
The survival strategy became necessary
when revenue
projections of the State got distorted as a result of the
economic terrorism inflicted on the nation by the administration of Goodluck Jonathan which led to consequences, some of which the country is still grappling with today and may have to grapple with for a long time.
When does altruism become a purely
economic community feature [5] at risk to be exploited by society at large, how can we sustain the one character trait that is governed by a
projection of the basic human attribute: the need to help another human being.
As a result, the Bank of Canada's current stance to leave interest rates unchanged given its concerns about the country's lacklustre
economic growth could be an important catalyst for preferred share performance going forward — especially
when combined with the U.S. Federal Reserve's
projections for multiple rate hikes this year.
You point to the middle of the bell curve and imply that provides comfort,
when there's a decent
economic argument that the worst case, while still uncertain, is the reason to act, not the middle case (particularly because there's little science concluding that the midrange of I.P.C.C. sensitivity
projection is most likely).
If this is not the case then these
projections must always be treated with suspicion and should not be relied upon
when making important decisions,
economic or otherwise.
When those climate model
projections are brought more in line with the current best science, the positive
economic benefits from Tol's model likely extend far beyond the end of the 21st century.