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Bloomberg THE Federal Reserve may take comfort that tariffs have yet to materially boost official inflation readings, but ...
Just as investors thought they could take a break from the tariff scares, President Donald Trump's threats of new levies against the European Union and Apple threw trade tensions back into focus ahead ...
The debt of other governments looks newly risky, too, with long-term yields rising across much of the rich world (see chart).
Surging Treasury yields signal deepening market fears as Trump's tax plan, soaring deficits, and global fiscal turmoil shake investor confidence.
The Bank of Japan has officially taken control of 52.0% of all Japanese government bonds, according to data from Bloomberg.
US trade-policy fingerprints are expected to become more apparent as soon as next month, according to many economists ...
"Unless that changes, the dollar will remain on a much longer leash than any currency should rightfully have." ...
The common sense rules still apply: in the long view shares are better than bonds and you should always spread risk. We ...