PANews reported on November 13th that Boston Fed President Collins, a voting member of the FOMC this year, said on Wednesday that she believes the threshold for further interest rate cuts in the near term is "relatively high" due to concerns about persistently high inflation. Collins voted for a rate cut last month. "Unless there are clear signs of a deterioration in the labor market, I would be cautious about further policy easing, especially given the limited inflation data we have due to the government shutdown… In the current highly uncertain environment, maintaining the policy rate at its current level for some time may be appropriate to balance inflation and employment risks." Her remarks highlight deep divisions within the Fed. Since the last rate cut, several Fed officials, including Collins and some non-voting members, have signaled increasing caution regarding further rate cuts. Collins believes that short-term borrowing costs are currently in a "mildly tight" range, while overall financial conditions still provide a tailwind for economic growth. While the labor market has indeed slowed, downside risks have not intensified since the summer. (Jinshi Data APP)PANews reported on November 13th that Boston Fed President Collins, a voting member of the FOMC this year, said on Wednesday that she believes the threshold for further interest rate cuts in the near term is "relatively high" due to concerns about persistently high inflation. Collins voted for a rate cut last month. "Unless there are clear signs of a deterioration in the labor market, I would be cautious about further policy easing, especially given the limited inflation data we have due to the government shutdown… In the current highly uncertain environment, maintaining the policy rate at its current level for some time may be appropriate to balance inflation and employment risks." Her remarks highlight deep divisions within the Fed. Since the last rate cut, several Fed officials, including Collins and some non-voting members, have signaled increasing caution regarding further rate cuts. Collins believes that short-term borrowing costs are currently in a "mildly tight" range, while overall financial conditions still provide a tailwind for economic growth. While the labor market has indeed slowed, downside risks have not intensified since the summer. (Jinshi Data APP)

Federal Reserve's Collins: Keeping interest rates unchanged for some time may be the right approach.

2025/11/13 07:14

PANews reported on November 13th that Boston Fed President Collins, a voting member of the FOMC this year, said on Wednesday that she believes the threshold for further interest rate cuts in the near term is "relatively high" due to concerns about persistently high inflation. Collins voted for a rate cut last month. "Unless there are clear signs of a deterioration in the labor market, I would be cautious about further policy easing, especially given the limited inflation data we have due to the government shutdown… In the current highly uncertain environment, maintaining the policy rate at its current level for some time may be appropriate to balance inflation and employment risks." Her remarks highlight deep divisions within the Fed. Since the last rate cut, several Fed officials, including Collins and some non-voting members, have signaled increasing caution regarding further rate cuts. Collins believes that short-term borrowing costs are currently in a "mildly tight" range, while overall financial conditions still provide a tailwind for economic growth. While the labor market has indeed slowed, downside risks have not intensified since the summer. (Jinshi Data APP)

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PANews reported on November 13th that, according to Cryptopolitan, Pump.fun announced the launch of an experimental Mayhem mode, allowing AI agents to participate in the trading of newly issued tokens. This automated bidding method represents a breakthrough for both AI agents and the Mayhem coin, as most agents previously relied on human assistance. Pump.fun stated that the mode aims to increase early trading volume by introducing AI agents, but did not explicitly announce the participating agents, leaving it to the community to discover from relevant documents. Unlike previous methods, the AI agents will not create new tokens. Token creators on Pump.fun must select the Mayhem mode before issuance. This mode will not apply to existing or graduated tokens on the Pump.fun binding curve. The AI agent will issue 1 billion new tokens for each Meme coin, bringing the total supply to 2 billion. The AI agent will then randomly trade these tokens, increasing initial trading risk and volatility. After a 24-hour period, unsold tokens and tokens sent to the AI agent's wallet during this period will be destroyed without affecting its buying and selling decisions. The AI agent may randomly sell more tokens, potentially exhausting the binding curve and preventing human traders from selling. Given the prevalence of front-running bots, this AI agent may primarily compete with simple trading bots.
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PANews2025/11/13 09:11