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Tamarack Valley Energy Ltd T.TVE

Alternate Symbol(s):  TNEYF

Tamarack Valley Energy Ltd. is a Canada-based oil and gas exploration and production company. The Company's asset portfolio is comprised of oil plays in Alberta, including Charlie Lake, Clearwater and several enhanced oil recovery (EOR) opportunities. The Company has an inventory of low-risk, oil development drilling locations. Its Clearwater oil play is located in north-central Alberta. Its Charlie Lake oil play is located in northwestern Alberta. Its EOR portfolio includes a set of assets across Alberta representing a range of formations and production types. The Company’s subsidiary is Tamarack Ridge Resources Inc.


TSX:TVE - Post by User

Post by Dibah420on Dec 13, 2023 2:12pm
173 Views
Post# 35782678

The Fed Pivots

The Fed Pivots

Federal Reserve MeetingFed Holds Rates Steady

Policymakers kept interest rates on hold for a third consecutive meeting, and signaled three rate cuts in 2024.

 
 

20

%

18

Federal funds

target rate

16

14

12

RECESSIONS

10

8

6

No change

4

2

0

1970

’75

’80

’85

’90

’95

2000

’05

’10

’15

’20

Note: The rate since December 2008 is the upper limit of the federal funds target range.

Source: Federal Reserve

By Karl Russell

 
 
Pinned
Jeanna Smialek
Dec. 13, 2023, 2:08 p.m. ET2 minutes ago
2 minutes ago

Fed officials leave rates unchanged and forecast three cuts next year.

Federal Reserve officials left interest rates unchanged in their final policy decision of 2023 and forecast that they will cut borrowing costs three times in the coming year, a sign that the central bank is shifting toward the next phase in its fight against rapid inflation.

Interest rates are now set to a range of 5.25 to 5.5 percent, where they have been since July. After making a rapid series of increases that started in March 2022 and pushed borrowing costs to their highest level in 22 years as of this summer, officials have now held policy steady for three straight meetings.

Policymakers are striking that patient stance to give themselves time to assess whether interest rates are high enough to weigh on the economy and ensure that inflation will slow to the Fed’s 2 percent target over time. Price increases have been cooling for months and hiring has slowed, which has been giving officials more confidence that their current setting may be sufficient.

Investors are watching closely for any hint at when — and how much — interest rates will fall. Fed policymakers projected on Wednesday that they will lower borrowing costs to 4.6 percent by the end of 2024, down notably from their previous 5.1 percent estimate. The forecast implies that officials will make three rate cuts next year. That call for lower rates was widespread: Not a single Fed official expected interest rates to be higher at the end of next year.

The Fed’s quarterly economic projections, the first set it has released since September, also showed that central bankers expect inflation to fade slightly more quickly than officials had previously forecast.

Even as Fed officials laid out an optimistic vision of the future — one that suggests they may well pull off a “soft landing,” cooling inflation without painful economic consequences — policymakers did not firmly declare victory. They kept alive the possibility of further rate increases if inflation should prove stubborn.

“Recent indicators suggest that growth of economic activity has slowed from its strong pace in the third quarter,” Fed officials said in their statement, noting that inflation had “eased over the past year” but “remains elevated,” and promising to watch a broad array of data to determine the extent of “any additional policy firming that may be appropriate.”

Historically, efforts to lower inflation by slowing demand sharply have ended in a recession. But officials are increasingly hopeful that this time might be different.

The Fed’s economic projections released Wednesday showed that policymakers expect inflation to return to 2 percent by 2026. They also showed that officials still expect unemployment to reach 4.1 percent next year, as growth slows slightly more quickly than was previously forecast.

Now, investors are likely to focus on any clues about when exactly the Fed might begin to lower interest rates if the economy evolves as expected. The economic projections show where rates will be at the end of 2024, but give little hint about the timing of policy adjustments.

Joe Rennison
Dec. 13, 2023, 2:07 p.m. ET3 minutes ago
3 minutes ago

The two-year Treasury yield, which is sensitive to changes in interest-rate expectations, has fallen sharply, down almost 0.2 percentage points to 4.56 percent, it’s biggest move lower in a month.

Lydia DePillis
Dec. 13, 2023, 2:07 p.m. ET4 minutes ago
4 minutes ago

The projections for unemployment were fairly tame, but I do wonder which committee participant is expecting unemployment to rise to between 4.6 and 4.7 percent in 2025!

 

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Ben Casselman
Dec. 13, 2023, 2:06 p.m. ET5 minutes ago
5 minutes ago

How much have forecasts shifted this year? A year ago, Fed officials expected gross domestic product, adjusted for inflation, to grow just 0.5 percent this year. Now as the year wraps up, they think G.D.P. grew 2.6 percent — faster than in 2022.

Joe Rennison
Dec. 13, 2023, 2:05 p.m. ET5 minutes ago
5 minutes ago

The S&P 500 rose sharply on the release of the Fed’s economic projections and forecast for rate cuts. The index rose to a gain of 0.5 percent for the day, closing in on its all-time high.

S&P 500

 
Dec. 11
 
Dec. 12
 
Dec. 13
 
4,600
 
4,620
 
4,640

 

 

Data delayed at least 15 minutes

Source: FactSet

By John-Michael Murphy

Jeanna Smialek
Dec. 13, 2023, 2:04 p.m. ET7 minutes ago
7 minutes ago

The call for lower rates was widespread: Not a single Fed official expected interest rates to be higher at the end of next year, and one outlier even expected them to fall below 4 percent. That comes from the “dot plot,” an array of anonymized individual interest rate projections the Fed releases once per quarter. The forecasts are shown as blue dots arrayed on a white background, hence the name.

Jeanna Smialek
Dec. 13, 2023, 2:03 p.m. ET8 minutes ago
8 minutes ago

Fed policymakers also released fresh forecasts for inflation and unemployment. They see inflation reaching their 2 percent goal in 2026, and they expect unemployment to rise to 4.1 percent next year and then hover there.

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