Date for The FED to raise interest rates?

2020 they will possibly raise rates from 0-0.25% to 0.25%. Why do I even bother with this shit anymore? I reached my stacker target about 2 years ago and have moved on. I check market prices etc most days, but I Don't bother reading much stuff any more concerning PM's.
Everything is rigged, it's all a scam. Life goes on, I have my 'insurance' policy which isn't in government hands.
When the next big economic crisis occurs I will take more of an interest but until that time I will be doing other stuff. :)
 
aleks said:
4am friday morning, Australian east coast (2pm thursday NY time)

Damn it........ I was hoping they would make the decision sometime today (The 16th).

Now I gotta wait another day and half..........Bugger!
 
rates on hold

1930849.jpg
 
lol they stuck!!
They in control alright... like a run away train driver with no breaks, next move is to see if acceleration will help lol
 
silverzman said:
Can they cut from 0% :)

Sure can, a recent feasibility study in the US suggested that rates would need to be between -3.0% and -4.0% in order to respond to a total collapse of the stock market. The study also suggested that when below -1.0% there would be to much incentive to pull cash out the bank so a cashless system would need to be put into place prior. It was also pointed out that a cashless system would only work if majority of the major economies went cashless at the same time otherwise US citizens would most like continue cash transactions in Euros or another currency. It's interesting to see the global push now towards everyone going cashless following this study.
 
Damn it!

I was reallly hoping Yellen would raise rates a little to send some shock into the system.

Now we gotta wait until October for gods sake!!!
 
tozak said:
silverzman said:
Can they cut from 0% :)

Sure can, a recent feasibility study in the US suggested that rates would need to be between -3.0% and -4.0% in order to respond to a total collapse of the stock market. The study also suggested that when below -1.0% there would be to much incentive to pull cash out the bank so a cashless system would need to be put into place prior. It was also pointed out that a cashless system would only work if majority of the major economies went cashless at the same time otherwise US citizens would most like continue cash transactions in Euros or another currency. It's interesting to see the global push now towards everyone going cashless following this study.
Yeah and dumb Aussies are leading the way.We're the highest adopter of the paypass/paywave system.
 
The boy who cried wolf:

Fed still on track for rate hike this year, Yellen says
Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said on Thursday she expects the U.S. central bank to begin raising interest rates later this year as long as inflation remains stable and the U.S. economy is strong enough to boost employment.

Yellen, who spoke a week after the Fed delayed a long-anticipated rate hike, said she and other Fed policymakers do not expect recent global economic and financial market developments to significantly affect the central bank's policy.

That message, along with Yellen's contention that recent inflationary weakness is likely transitory, may come as a surprise to some investors who took last week's decision as a sign that a policy tightening was no longer imminent and would likely come next year.

Much of the recent price weakness is due to special factors such as a strong dollar and low oil prices, which are likely to fade, Yellen said, allowing U.S. inflation to rise to a 2-percent goal over the next few years.

She and the policy-making Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) expect the world's largest economy to be strong enough to achieve maximum employment and to keep expectations for prices stable, she said.

"Most FOMC participants, including myself, currently anticipate that achieving these conditions will likely entail an initial increase in the federal funds rate later this year, followed by a gradual pace of tightening thereafter," Yellen told hundreds of students and local residents at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

As it stands, she said, U.S. economic prospects "generally appear solid."
...

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/09/24/us-usa-fed-yellen-idUSKCN0RO2GR20150924
 
She has to appear confident regardless of the current situation as the Fed has a mandate to tighten fiscal policy. She could very well know that the Fed is closer to loosening policy, but would never admit it as the markets need at least the perception that the Fed is in control.
 
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