News Results

  1. ECB's Lagarde receives 140,000 euros from BIS despite payment ban for ECB staff, FT reports
    Reuters | 02/23/26 12:16 AM EST

    European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde ?receives about ?140,000 euros a ?year as a Bank ?for International Settlements ?board ?member despite an ECB ?ban on ?third-party payments to staff, the Financial ?Times ?reported ?on Monday.

  2. BOJ may raise rates in March if yen resumes slide, says ex-policymaker
    Reuters | 02/22/26 09:35 PM EST

    The Bank of Japan may raise interest rates as soon as March if the yen renews its slide ahead of a U.S.-Japan summit expected to be held during the month, former central bank board member Makoto Sakurai told Reuters.

  3. BOJ may raise rates in March if yen resumes slide, says ex-policymaker
    Reuters | 02/22/26 09:33 PM EST

    * U.S. rate checks show Washington's preference for strong yen. * April hike makes better sense but yen moves may trigger March. * BOJ may need to hike rates twice each in 2026, 2027. * Hiking rates at faster pace may stoke financial system risk. By Leika Kihara.

  4. Sustainable Finance Market to Hit $27 Trillion by 2031 as Green Bonds Held 53%+ Share in 2025, Says a 2026 Mordor Intelligence Report
    PR Newswire | 02/22/26 08:31 PM EST

    HYDERABAD, India, Feb. 23, 2026 ?According to Mordor Intelligence's latest report, the?sustainable finance market size?is expanding from USD 13.4 trillion in 2025 to USD 15.06 trillion in 2026, and is projected to approach USD 26.93 trillion by 2031, growing at a CAGR of 12.34%. Europe continues to hold the largest share of sustainable capital, while Asia-Pacific is?emerging?rapidly as ins...

  5. Oil slides as US tariff hike raise jitters over global economy
    Reuters | 02/22/26 06:23 PM EST

    Oil prices slipped on Monday after President Donald Trump said ?he would raise ?U.S. tariffs on global imports, creating ?uncertainty for world economic growth ?and fuel consumption.

  6. Trump's Global Tariffs, GDP Slump, Recession Warning And More: This Week In Economy
    Benzinga | 02/22/26 06:00 AM EST

    The past week has been a whirlwind of economic and political events. Republican lawmakers have expressed their opposition to President Donald Trump?s new 10% global tariff. Read the full article here. U.S. heavy vehicle sales, a powerful leading indicator, are signaling caution. Read the full article here.

  7. Japan's SBI to issue 10 billion yen onchain bond with XRP rewards for retail investors
    Coindesk | 02/21/26 01:21 PM EST

    The SBI START Bonds offer a fixed interest rate, blockchain settlement, and XRP rewards for eligible investors registered on the firm?s exchange.

  8. ECB's Panetta says Chinese imports helped drive sharper-than-forecast inflation drop
    Reuters | 02/21/26 05:34 AM EST

    Risks to euro zone inflation are "significant" in either direction, a top European Central Bank policymaker warned on Saturday, adding that the impact on prices of cheap Chinese imports ?warranted close attention.

  9. Analysis-US Supreme Court ruling offers little respite for global economy
    Reuters | 02/20/26 08:06 PM EST

    While the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling on Friday against President Donald Trump's use of tariffs marks a clear setback for his use of trade levies as an economic weapon, analysts say it offers little immediate relief for the global economy.

  10. Supreme Court tariff ruling clouds Fed's rate path after a year of upheaval
    Reuters | 02/20/26 06:04 PM EST

    The Supreme Court's ruling against a broad set of the Trump administration's tariffs poses new questions for Federal Reserve policymakers who have spent the last year trying to understand how the president's sharply higher import taxes would affect inflation and the economic trajectory.

In general the bond market is volatile, and fixed income securities carry interest rate risk. (As interest rates rise, bond prices usually fall, and vice versa. This effect is usually more pronounced for longer-term securities.) Fixed income securities also carry inflation risk and credit and default risks for both issuers and counterparties. Unlike individual bonds, most bond funds do not have a maturity date, so avoiding losses caused by price volatility by holding them until maturity is not possible.

Lower-quality debt securities generally offer higher yields, but also involve greater risk of default or price changes due to potential changes in the credit quality of the issuer. Any fixed income security sold or redeemed prior to maturity may be subject to loss.

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