2-Year Treasury Yield: 4.13% — down 0.01% from 2026-07-02
2-Year Treasury Yield: 4.13% | ↓ -0.01% from 2026-07-02
The Federal Reserve reported on July 8, 2026, that the Interest on Reserve Balances remained unchanged at 3.65 percent. In research published the same day, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York indicated that inflationary pressures from tariffs will likely persist, as nearly half of affected firms plan further price hikes due to existing fixed-price contracts and incremental pricing strategies. Additionally, a New York Fed blog post released on July 7 analyzed over 3,000 historical U.S. bank runs occurring between 1863 and 1934. The study concluded that these runs are primarily symptoms of underlying financial weakness rather than the root cause of systemic failure, challenging the theory that small shocks alone trigger widespread crises through self-fulfilling dynamics. These updates reflect the Fed's ongoing monitoring of interest rates, inflationary trends, and historical banking stability. Synthesized from 46 manifests produced by 16 monitored official Federal Reserve sources in the last 7 days, including Federal Reserve Board releases, FOMC notices, Fed research notes.
Answer updated Jul 11, 2026 00:00 UTC · rebuilt twice daily from the rolling 168-hour window
2-Year Treasury Yield: 4.13% — down 0.01% from 2026-07-02
2-Year Treasury Yield: 4.13% | ↓ -0.01% from 2026-07-02
Interest on Reserve Balances (IORB): 3.65% — unchanged from 2026-07-07
Interest on Reserve Balances (IORB): 3.65% | → +0.0% from 2026-07-07
What Do Over 3,000 Bank Runs Teach Us About Banking Crises?
A new study of over 3,000 historical U.S. bank runs challenges the view that small shocks can trigger widespread crises through self-fulfilling dynamics alone. By analyzing data from 1863 to 1934, researchers demonstrate that bank runs are primarily a symptom of underlying financial weakness rather than the root cause
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