Janet Yellen may start 'reverse quantitative easing' in 2016: asset manager

Following its meeting last week, the Federal Reserve chose to leave interest rates unchanged again. While I believe that the Fed would like to adopt more of an increasingly hawkish stance given solidifying economic data in the U.S. and mounting inflationary pressures, it seems that it continues to strike somewhat of a dovish tone to appease certain vocal dissenters. Let's call Yellen "hovish."

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