
Conversations with power players steering the future
The 'Ship is Washington Post Live's groundbreaking new series exploring the timeless lessons of leadership in an age of constant change. Hear from influential policymakers, pioneering trailblazers and industry titans about their journeys, principles of leadership and the big questions shaping the future.
Christine Lagarde
President, European Central Bank
Dina Powell McCormick
Co-Author, 'Who Believed in You'
Sen. David McCormick (R-PA)
Co-Author, 'Who Believed in You
Mary Barra
Chair & CEO, General Motors
Tara VanDerveer
Hall of Fame Women's Basketball Coach
The following content is produced and paid for by a Washington Post Live event sponsor. The Washington Post newsroom is not involved in the production of this content.
Today's CEOs face relentless disruption, rising division, and rapid innovation—all under intense scrutiny. In a segment presented by The Executive Leadership Council (ELC), President & CEO, Michael C. Hyter, shares exclusive findings from the latest Voice of the ELC Member survey, revealing key business priorities over the next 2-3 years and the critical skills leaders need to drive performance, lead diverse global teams, and navigate complexity with resilience, influence, and impact.
Michael C. Hyter
President & CEO, The Executive Leadership Council
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The ECB Lowered Interest Rates Again. Trump Has Pushed the Fed to Do the Same
The European Central Bank lowered interest rates Thursday, the eighth time it has done so over the past year. President Donald Trump recently criticized Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell for not following the ECB's lead on cutting rates. The ECB said its future decisions could be affected by the heightened uncertainty of the current tariff European Central Bank cut interest rates Thursday, putting the body further ahead of its U.S. counterpart in moving toward a less restrictive monetary policy—likely to the chagrin of President Donald Trump. The ECB's willingness to lower rates (it's done so at eight consecutive meetings over the past year) differs from the Federal Reserve, which has held U.S. rates steady this year in an attempt to drive down inflation to a 2% annual rate. This has drawn criticism from Trump, who wants Powell to cut interest rates to lower borrowing costs and boost economic growth and job creation to avoid a downturn. On Wednesday, the ADP's survey of job creation found that pirate employers added 37,000 jobs in May, well below the 110,000 forecasters had expected. Trump took to Truth Social, posting, "ADP NUMBER OUT!!! 'Too Late' Powell must now LOWER THE RATE. He is unbelievable!!! Europe has lowered NINE TIMES!" Trump's tariff policy could be making it more likely the Fed holds back from cutting rates, however, due to concern that import taxes could reignite high inflation in the U.S. Meanwhile, European central bankers have been more concerned that the trade tensions with the U.S. could slow their countries' economies. The ECB said an escalation of tariffs would limit growth and inflation, while a 'benign' resolution to the trade disputes would likely lead to growth and may spur higher inflation. Inflation in the euro area is currently near the ECB Governing Council's 2% medium-term target. For now, the decision to lower rates 'should make the economy more resilient to global shocks,' the ECB said. Read the original article on Investopedia Sign in to access your portfolio

Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
ECB signals a summer pause after latest rate cut
-- The European Central Bank cut interest rates by 25 basis points on Thursday but signalled that further easing is unlikely before the autumn. According to ING, 'comments from the ECB's press conference suggest Board members are in no hurry to cut rates again at the July meeting – unless there is a new escalation of trade tensions.' ECB President Christine Lagarde emphasised a cautious approach, suggesting that the central bank would 'stick to a wait-and-see approach over the summer.' ING noted the ECB sees the recent disinflation as 'mainly transitory due to energy prices and the stronger euro.' Still, ING believes 'today's rate cut [is not] the last one this year,' and expects another reduction in September. The longer-term picture remains mixed. ING reported that the ECB maintains 'a more optimistic longer-term picture for growth on the back of German fiscal stimulus and European intentions to step up defence spending.' However, a cooling labour market and signs of disinflation 'should provide enough room for at least one more rate cut after the summer.' Wells Fargo echoed this view, stating: 'We expect a pause from the ECB at its July meeting and a 25 bps rate cut by the ECB in September.' The bank sees risks tilted toward 'a more pronounced easing cycle,' but added there is 'not yet… compelling enough evidence for the ECB to hasten or add to its rate cut cycle.' Macquarie analysts were more sceptical, arguing that 'further rate cuts may be hard to justify.' Related articles ECB signals a summer pause after latest rate cut Trump unlikely to drive down drug prices substantially: Capital Economics Citadel's Griffin: cost of U.S. default insurance is "unfathomable" Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
2 hours ago
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ECB governors see July pause but Sept up in the air
FRANKFURT (Reuters) -A clear majority of European Central Bank policymakers meeting on Thursday expressed a preference for holding interest rates steady next month and a few even made the case for an even longer pause, four sources told Reuters. The ECB cut interest rates for the eighth time in a year on Thursday but hinted at a pause in its year-long easing cycle after inflation finally returned to its 2% target. ECB policymakers did not explicitly discuss their July decision but their deliberations revealed a clear preference for no change then since little new information would come out in the next six weeks and interest rates were already low enough to support the economy, the sources said. An ECB spokesperson declined to comment. While some policymakers argued for a longer pause, most preferred not to discuss meetings beyond July, arguing that new economic projections in September would be crucial. Some also argued that any meaningful fall in inflation below 2% in the coming months could justify a further cut in borrowing costs. All policymakers apart from Austrian governor Robert Holzmann backed Thursday's rate cut. (Reporting By Balazs Koranyi and Francesco Canepa; Editing by Hugh Lawson) Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data