Fed eases up | Rail deal on track | SBF says 'sorry'
1. Fed eases up Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said smaller interest rate hikes could start as soon as this month, signaling that the central bank will soon ease up on its aggressive inflation-fighting measures. Powell, speaking at the Brookings Institution Wednesday, said the Fed would continue to implement restrictive monetary policy for some time — following four successive 0.75-percentage point rate increases — but that it has seen "promising developments" so far. "It makes sense to moderate the pace of our rate increases as we approach the level of restraint that will be sufficient to bring inflation down," he said. 2. Markets eye inflation signals Stocks are looking to build on a market rebound after a sharp rally on Wednesday. The Nasdaq Composite and S&P 500 each snapped three-day losing streaks after Fed Chair Powell's talk of a rate hike slowdown. The Dow gained more than 700 points during the session. But Thursday brings new data on personal income and spending, and Friday brings a hotly anticipated jobs report. |
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3. Rail deal on track The House approved a tentative labor agreement between railroads and their workers' unions on Wednesday in an effort to avert a widespread and costly strike. In a 290 to 137 vote, the House approved new contracts for rail workers that include 24% pay raises over five years as well as payouts averaging $11,000 and an extra paid day off. In a separate vote, the House also passed a resolution to add seven days of paid sick time to the contracts. Both measures now face a vote in the Senate on a tight timeline — without an agreement, the effects of a potential strike could be felt as soon as this weekend. 4. SBF says 'sorry' The former CEO of cryptocurrency firm FTX apologized for missteps in a conversation with Andrew Ross Sorkin at the New York Times Dealbook conference on Wednesday. Sam Bankman-Fried said from the Bahamas that he "didn't ever try to commit fraud on anyone" and that he was "shocked by what happened this month." FTX filed for bankruptcy in November in the face of liquidity issues, a frenzy of users withdrawals and a failed takeover by rival Binance. 5. Ukraine on the offensive Ukraine is preparing a 'countermeasure' to Russia's offensive measures, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Wednesday night, though he didn't elaborate on what that might look like. In recent months, Ukraine has reclaimed some parts of the country that had been seized by Russian forces. "We are analyzing the intentions of the occupiers and are preparing a countermeasure — an even more powerful countermeasure than it's been," Zelenskyy said. – CNBC's Jeff Cox, Samantha Subin, Rohan Goswami, Mackenzie Sigalos, Christina Wilkie and Lori Ann LaRocco contributed to this report. — Follow Squawk Pod for the best conversations and analysis from Squawk Box in a curated, daily podcast. |
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