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Markets, companies, policy, work, and consumer shifts.

Original PanoramaDigest graphic showing the June 17, 2026 Fed rate hold, Warsh's leaner guidance strategy, and the immediate Treasury-yield repricing that followed.

Business

Kevin Warsh Wants a Quieter Fed. Markets May Send Households the Bill.

The Federal Reserve did not change rates on June 17, 2026. What changed was the cost of reading the Fed. Kevin Warsh's push for less forward guidance risks making markets, mortgages and corporate borrowing more jumpy before inflation is any lower.

PanoramaDigest EditorsJun 20, 20265 min
Original PanoramaDigest explainer graphic showing Invenergy's affected offshore wind lease regions and the redirection of 765 million dollars toward gas and geothermal projects.

Business

Invenergy's $765 Million Offshore Wind Exit Shows How Washington Is Rewiring the Energy Map

On June 17, 2026, the Trump administration and Invenergy agreed to terminate four offshore wind leases in the New York Bight, Gulf of Maine and off California's central coast. The $765 million reimbursement is not just another energy headline. It is a vivid sign that federal policy is moving capital away from coastal clean-power plans and toward gas and geothermal projects that can be built on a faster commercial clock.

PanoramaDigest EditorsJun 18, 20266 min
Original PanoramaDigest chart comparing the Federal Reserve's March and June 2026 median rate projections, showing the 2026 path rising to 3.8% from 3.4%.

Business

The Fed Held Rates Steady. The Real Shift Was in the Dot Plot.

The Federal Reserve left its benchmark range at 3.5% to 3.75% on June 17, 2026, but officials quietly moved their median rate path higher through 2028. For borrowers and investors, the bigger message was not patience. It was that relief still looks farther away than it did in March.

PanoramaDigest EditorsJun 17, 20266 min

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