Prøve GULL - Gratis
Fed set to pause rate cuts, with no clear path to resuming
Mint Bangalore
|January 28, 2026
Federal Reserve officials this week are expected to stop cutting interest rates for the first time since September, holding steady after three consecutive reductions.
U.S. Federal Reserve officials disagree over when inflation data will justify further reductions.
(REUTERS)
The harder question is what it would take to start again.The answer depends on which risk materializes first: a job market that breaks, or inflation that convincingly resumes falling toward 2%.
Neither has happened since officials’ last meeting in December. Job growth has slowed sharply, but the unemployment rate has stabilized. Inflation remains stuck around 2.8%, above the Fed's 2% target, though some officials think the underlying trend is closer to their goal once the effects of tariffs are stripped out.
The result is a committee in a holding pattern—even as the Fed faces extraordinary political pressure from the White House—with most officials still expecting rate cuts are possible later this year but disagreeing over when the data will justify doing so.
The Justice Department this month opened a criminal investigation into Jerome Powell, which he disclosed in a startling video statement casting the probe as a pretext to advance President Trump’s desire for lower interest rates. Last week, the Supreme Court heard arguments over whether Trump can fire Fed governor Lisa Cook, with several justices expressing skepticism about the president’s authority to remove her. Trump’s advisers have suggested he is close to announcing his choice to succeed Powell, whose term as chair ends in May.
Denne historien er fra January 28, 2026-utgaven av Mint Bangalore.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Mint Bangalore
Mint Bangalore
Coal makes a comeback, fueled by war in the Middle East
Coal is making a comeback.
4 mins
May 18, 2026
Mint Bangalore
Embracing diversification with hybrid funds
Many investors want growth but also fear volatility. Hybrid funds deliver exactly that. They are designed to follow a balanced approach by investing in a mix of equity, debt, and sometimes even gold or other assets.
1 mins
May 18, 2026
Mint Bangalore
Easing of IPO size rule finds few takers as valuations remain key
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) granted a rare concession in troubled times: the freedom to reduce a public offering by half without re-filing paperwork. A month later, there are few takers for it.
1 mins
May 18, 2026
Mint Bangalore
Making ego an ally, not an adversary
Having an ego isn't necessarily bad as a leader—the key is to use it in proportion with openness and a sense of lightness
4 mins
May 18, 2026
Mint Bangalore
Suspicious betting in Washington is on the rise—and authorities are playing catch-up
Regulators are seeking information from Kalshi and Polymarket over wagers tied to political events and military operations
5 mins
May 18, 2026
Mint Bangalore
Why India’s mid-cap IT firms fear AI less than the big six
IT firms with $1-2 bn revenues outpaced India’s largest software exporters in growth last year
3 mins
May 18, 2026
Mint Bangalore
THE MARKET CRISIS: THIS TIME, DAMAGE SEEMS TO BE REAL
Through the dotcom bust, the 2008 crisis, demonetization, the covid crash, Ukraine war, and oil shocks in between, my advice in this column has stayed the same: stay the course.
3 mins
May 18, 2026
Mint Bangalore
FUEL FOR THOUGHT: CAN INDIA DRIVE ON 100% ETHANOL?
Brazil has done it. But India has a much bigger population and food needs
8 mins
May 18, 2026
Mint Bangalore
FASTags for toll-exempt vehicles soon
The Centre is developing a separate category of FASTags for toll-exempt vehicles as part of its nationwide rollout of barrier-free highway tolling under the Multi-Lane Free Flow (MLFF) regime, according to two people aware of the matter.
1 mins
May 18, 2026
Mint Bangalore
Adani eyes an Apple model to scale up rapidly via vendors
Billionaire Gautam Adani is looking to outsource vast swathes of the group's operations to its vendors while conserving management bandwidth for strategy, research and finance, following the global playbook of multinationals such as Apple and Hyundai, which rely heavily on contract manufacturing to scale rapidly.
1 min
May 18, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
