Inflation data has continued to fuel uncertainty about when the Federal Reserve will begin to cut interest rates. It's a question with global implications.
There are signs that some previous "rolling recessions" are starting to turn into rolling recoveries.
Sentiment data is beginning to match relatively strong "hard" economic data.
Economic data has provided encouragement for both stock market bulls and bears.
While surface-level economic data appear resilient, details below the surface are mixed.
Competing narratives have emerged to describe the state of the U.S. economy.
Will the economy roll into a formal recession, or is a recovery underway? It's a close call.
As summer temperatures peak, inflation just won't completely cool down. The question is how much more the Federal Reserve should do about it.
Sometimes it feels like the economy and markets are on different tracks.
Political brinkmanship in Washington adds to concerns about the economy.
What does a potential change in Federal Reserve policy mean for markets and the economy?
Investors continue to seek signs of a change in season—and clues about how the Federal Reserve might react to it.
Inflation trends are moving in a favorable direction, but the change is likely too slow for the Fed to take its foot off the brake anytime soon.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine overturned a lot of assumptions about the near-term direction of the global economy.