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The April FOMC was billed as Fed Chair Jerome Powell's final meeting as the Federal Reserve Chair. In his final meeting as Fed Chair, Powell oversaw another policy decision that stated no changes to current benchmark interest rates.

The US Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged on Wednesday, in line with market expectations, but policymakers showed an unusual split over the path ahead as the central bank signaled a slightly more dovish tone. Fed Chair Jerome Powell announced no change to the benchmark rate, while Governor Stephen Miran dissented in favor of an immediate quarter-point rate cut.

This is a developing story.

Fed policymakers made their latest decision on interest rates, opting to keep interest rates at a range of 3.5% to 3.75%. Check the related video for Chair Powell's press conference.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell says concerns about recent legal attacks on the central bank has led him to the decision to stay at the institution and will leave when it is appropriate to do so. While Powell's term as Fed chair ends on May 15, his seat on the Board of Governors doesn't expire until 2028.

‘The Big Money Show' discusses Jerome Powell's uncertain future, the Fed's rate decision and Kevin Warsh's nomination as a potential leadership shift looms. #foxbusiness #bigmoneyshow 00:00 Introduction & Kevin Warsh's Nomination 01:08 Warsh's Fed Reform Agenda 02:01 No Immediate Rate Cuts Under Warsh 07:02 Key Challenges for the Fed Chair 10:02 Reforming Bank Reserve Payments 12:53 The Future of Jerome Powell

Research finds it's all right to do so under certain growth and interest-rate conditions. Beware otherwise.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell says he'll continue to serve as a governor “for a period of time to be determined” but with a low profile. He speaks in Washington after the FOMC left interest rates unchanged.

The technology sector is positioned for a further 40% to 50% rally based on contrarian sentiment indicators. Short selling and put buying remain elevated, signaling the current rally in tech has significant room to run.

“I will continue to serve as a governor for a period of time to be determined,” the outgoing Federal Reserve chair said Wednesday.

Bill Ackman explains why he sees opportunity even with markets near all‑time highs — and how his new U.S.‑listed IPO, Pershing Square USA, gives investors access to the long‑term strategy he's used to outperform the market. 00:00 Introduction 00:18 Fund structure: Pershing Square Inc. vs PS USA 00:49 Why launch a new fund now 01:42 Why deploy capital in a strong market 02:14 Concentrated portfolio strategy explained 03:06 Core holdings and portfolio composition 03:46 Key risks for investors on day one 04:35 Why not just buy the S&P 500 or individual stocks 05:08 Long-term returns vs S&P 500 comparison 06:07 Hedging strategy and downside protection history 07:06 Why investors are committing capital now 07:56 Market rally: justified or overdone 09:01 What the market is underestimating (growth/AI) 09:51 Biggest risk to the market outlook 10:48 Oil prices and macro impact on markets 11:19 Advice for retail investors (timing vs time in market) 12:40 Rapid fire: This or That Subscribe | http://t.st/TheStreetTV Earn.

Powell addressed the question of whether he will stay on as a Board of Governors member after his term as chair ends.

Jerome H. Powell cited lingering legal threats against him and the Federal Reserve in explaining his decision to remain at the central bank.

Fed leaves rates unchanged at 3.5% to 3.75% in a split decision.

Powell will give his last speech as central bank chair at 2:30 p.m. EST, during which he will likely signal the Federal Reserve's policy should be maintained.

The Federal Reserve leaves interest rates unchanged in a range of 3.5% to 3.75%. But four officials voted against the decision.

Scott Chronert, Citi U.S. equity strategist, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss Chronert's thoughts on equities, market valuations and much more.

Federal Reserve policymakers left interest rates unchanged in April amid concerns about elevated inflation and as Fed Chair Jerome Powell's term as central bank chairman draws to a close.

FOX Business White House correspondent Edward Lawrence reports on the Federal Reserve's rate decision on 'Making Money.'

Markets had widely expected the central bank to hold its benchmark rate in the 3.5% to 3.75% range.