Whatever that means
Higher mortgage rates made it more difficult to get on the property ladder
Also in this newsletter: Europe vs Musk, Big Tech emissions, AI job applications
Sharp fall in gauge of the pressures on domestic prices boosts the case for more interest rate cuts this year, economists say
Sharp fall in underlying price pressures will be welcomed by Bank of England rate-setters
Policymakers, regulators and investors need to be acutely aware of unintended consequences
Catherine Mann says pay pressure in the economy could take years to dissipate
The BoJ raised rates, the Fed was on hold and the BoE cut and then it all went wrong
It’s all about the gilt tilt
Central bank governor Andrew Bailey warns of dangers of moving ‘too much or too quickly’ after first reduction in more than four years
The rate-cutting cycle is unlikely to be a smooth ride down
Homebuying expected to pick up this autumn as confidence returns, say analysts
How higher rates really can drive higher inflation
Knife-edge vote marks boost to Labour government’s promise to kick-start economic growth
Reduction from 16-year high this week now given odds of over 60% by markets
Central bank inflation forecasts have become much more accurate, so why are they still in the doghouse?
Reverse reserve reservation reservations
Tokenisation could allow payments to be embedded more efficiently and deeply into our increasingly digital economy
On-target inflation fuels calls for interest rate cut ahead of MPC meeting this week, say economists
Tesla, Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple and Alphabet lead tech sector sell-off.
Market Questions is the FT’s guide to the week ahead
Regulator tells CEOs it could limit ‘amount and structure’ of business to prevent rapid build-up of risk in sector
Don’t fear the repo
Brokers anticipate the cheapest rates will drop below 4 per cent before the end of the year
Problem affecting Swift network impacted high-value and time-sensitive transactions