The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 slid 0.12 percent to 8,399.10, with property developers, energy and tech stocks leading losses. The broader All Ordinaries index ended down 0.18 percent at 8,644.50.
CPI was softer than expected, with headline CPI up 0.4% and core CPI up 0.2%, leading to YoY rates of 2.9% and 3.3%, respectively. Read what investors need to know.
The Consumer Price Index report for January is expected to show broadly unchanged annual inflation according to nowcasts. That may be broadly good news for the Fed.
The US Bureau of Labor is set to release the December CPI inflation data on January 15th. The consensus expectations are that: the core CPI inflation will increase by 0.2% MoM, which is below the ...
Consumer Price Index showed an acceleration to 2.9%, the highest rate since July. With such high inflation, the Fed is ...
Traders should keep watch on US Retail Sales data on Thursday, as it could increase volatility to Bitcoin price.
Inflation is proving stickier than expected, which could cause Fed to hit pause button on more interest rate cuts.
Investors brace for potential market volatility as December CPI data approaches, with expectations of rising inflation and impact on bond yields and equity markets due to Trump's inauguration and ...
In this piece, we will look at the stocks that Jim Cramer recently discussed.
US consumer prices rose in December by less than forecast, a welcome stepdown that helped arrest a deep selloff in bond ...
Jim Cramer started the show by commenting on the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) data release. The CPI is an inflation ...
The Fed has considered the inflation rate a key factor in its monetary policy decisions. The Fed’s key short-term interest ...