The Fed’s “beige book” report showed that the country slogged through slower economic growth and rising prices during the summer.

Read Full Article

Comment Share Save Email Rate: Rate 1 star out of 5 Rate 2 stars out of 5 Rate 3 stars out of 5 Rate 4 stars out of 5 Rate 5 stars out of 5

Add To Your Page


The Fed’s “beige book” report showed that the country slogged through slower economic growth and rising prices during the summer. Discussion
7/23/2008
Category: News
Views 5
Economy `Slow in Most of US, Fed Says in Beige Book ReportBloomberg - 32 minutes agoBy Scott Lanman Sept. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Business across most of the US was ``slow last ... Discussion
3 days ago
Category: News
Views 0
Reuters - Economic activity has been slow across most of the United States in recent weeks, but there has been some relief from high commodity and energy prices, the Federa ... Discussion
3 days ago
Category: News
Views 1
A flurry of reports, including the “beige book,” revealed an economy limping through a broad-based downturn. Discussion
4/16/2008
Category: News
Views 0
AP - The U.S. economy will slow sharply this year and fall behind growth rates in most of the world, according to forecasts in a U.N. report released Wednesday. Discussion
9/5/2007
Category: News
Views 1
Maktoob Business (press release)Beige Book Sees Continued WeaknessWall Street Journal - 2 hours agoBy BRIAN BLACKSTONE WASHINGTON -- The US economy remained weak through ... Discussion
6/11/2008
Category: News
Views 2
MaktoobTreasurys add onto gains after Fed Beige BookMarketWatch - 45 minutes agoBy Nick Godt, MarketWatch NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Treasurys added to earlier gains in af ... Discussion
3 days ago
Category: News
Views 0
Slow economic growth and high prices continue to weigh on consumers and businesses, and the problems are expected to persist into next year, the Federal Reserve said. Discussion
3 days ago
Category: News
Views 2
Treasurys add to earlier gains after the Federal Reserve's latest report on economic conditions highlighted a slowing U.S. economy. Discussion
3 days ago
Category: News
Views 0
Ben S. Bernanke cited the housing meltdown, tighter credit and rising oil prices, but he gave no signal that the central bank would cut rates again. Discussion
11/8/2007
Category: News
Views 7