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Consumer prices rose 2.4% on-the-year in May, defying fears that President Trump’s tariffs could lead to higher inflation. Here’s why economists think that will change in the coming months.
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YEN.com.gh on MSNUK inflation dips less than expected in MayBritish inflation eased less than expected in May after surging in April, official data showed Wednesday, fuelling ...
The U.S. economy is mostly in good shape, but that isn't saving Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell from a spell of angst.
The pound edged higher on Wednesday as investor nervousness over the escalating conflict in the Middle East weighed on the ...
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Official figures showed headline CPI stuck at 3.4 per cent in May, worse than the 3.3 per cent analysts had pencilled in.
The South African rand edged up in early trade on Wednesday ahead of the release of domestic inflation and retail sales data, ...
XPO, Inc. demonstrates resilience through improved efficiency, a strong balance sheet, and notable pricing power. Find out ...
While South Korea’s inflation has stabilized near the central bank’s 2% target, US tariffs and the Israel-Iran conflict are ...
Cancer patients say they’ve grown sicker since Argentina’s radical libertarian President Javier Milei took his chainsaw to ...
Sales at retail stores and restaurants dropped 0.9% in May, the Commerce Department said Tuesday, after a decline of 0.1% in ...
Cancer patients say they’ve grown sicker since Argentina’s radical libertarian President Javier Milei took his chainsaw to ...
The so-called Big Beautiful Bill targets the tax credits designed to put the U.S. on the path to net-zero carbon emissions.
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