While it was created with good intentions 13 years ago, the Federal Open Market Committee’s dot plot does not serve its primary purpose: providing transparency ...
The Fed’s dot plot is a chart that records each Fed official ... starting in March, followed by June, September and then ...
Every three months since January 2012, the Federal Reserve has sent ... such as last June, when policymakers refrained from hiking rates but the dot plot showed more increases to come later ...
Along with its policy announcement, the Fed released updated economic forecasts in its Summary of Economic Projections (SEP), including its "dot plot," which maps out policymakers' expectations ...
June 12 will ... the focus will be on Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s post-meeting press conference and officials’ updated Summary of Economic Projections, or the so-called Dot Plot.
The focus for financial markets will shift from US tech stocks to the FOMC meeting on Wednesday evening, when the Fed will ...
It’s a near certainty among economists and investors that the Federal Reserve will lower interest rates for a third straight time on Wednesday, but what happens in 2025 remains a relative mystery.
At the time of writing, futures markets are not fully pricing in the next Fed cut until the bank’s June meeting, with a ...
Every three months, the Fed's rate announcement includes a "Summary of Economic Projections." The latest installment was released today, and all eyes are on the "dot plot" forecast it contains.
Once the Fed's vaunted "dot plot" forecasted a fewer-than-expected two rate cuts for 2025, all three major indexes pivoted sharply lower, while the 10-year Treasury yield spiked to 4.47%.
Would the Fed, then, have presented the world with a slightly different dot plot, if they'd had the chance to review the PCE data first? Giving slight credence to that train of thought ...