Economists at Goldman Sachs cut their 12-month view on U.S. recession risk to 15% following the September jobs report. Read ...
The US recession many forecasters have been calling for isn't going to materialize anytime soon, according to market vet Ed ...
Economists are less concerned about an imminent downturn after far more jobs were added in September than expected, and ...
If Fed officials had known the subsequent data, they probably would have opted for a quarter-point cut on Sept. 18,” ...
The jobs report removed recession fears but slowed the path of rate cuts and sent yields higher. CPI and earnings season are ...
The U.S. economy looks more likely to have a "soft landing" rather than an economic crash in the wake of Friday's strong jobs ...
The labor market rebounds in September, as bond yields pop.
A blockbuster jobs report on Friday paved the way toward a soft landing, in which inflation returns to normal levels while ...
The September jobs report was stronger than expected and is likely to assuage recession fears, driving up hopes for soft ...
Investors are too quick to embrace soft-landing projections and are ignoring economic points of distress, Verdence's Megan ...
War in the Middle East, a strike by port workers and a devastating hurricane injected uncertainty into the U.S. economy.
A stronger-than-expected September jobs report has made a U.S. recession less likely, said Goldman Sachs analysts, who also raised growth targets for the S&P 500 index.