Business & Economy

Overnight Finance: New Mueller charges against Manafort, Gates | Fed official says bank should hike rates despite lagging inflation | FBI warns of tax season phishing schemes

Happy Thursday and welcome back to Overnight Finance, where we swear we don’t have any shell companies in Cyprus. I’m Sylvan Lane, and here’s your nightly guide to everything affecting your bills, bank account and bottom line.

See something I missed? Let me know at slane@digital-staging.thehill.com or tweet me @SylvanLane. And if you like your newsletter, you can subscribe to it here: http://bit.ly/1NxxW2N.

 

THE BIG DEAL: Paul Manafort and Rick Gates were charged Thursday with 32 counts of bank fraud, tax evasion and failing to disclose a dizzying array of foreign companies and holdings.

A federal court in Virginia on Thursday returned a 32-count superseding indictment charging Manafort and Gates through Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s wide-ranging investigation.

Here’s a rundown of what Manafort and Gates allegedly did according to investagators:

The Hill’s Morgan Chalfant and Jacqueline Thompson have everything you need to know covered here.

 

LEADING THE DAY

Rate, rate don’t tell me: Randal Quarles, the Federal Reserve’s vice chairman of supervision, said Thursday that the central bank should move ahead with a projected interest rate hike even if inflation lags below target levels.

Quarles, the first Fed governor appointed by President Trump, said the bank shouldn’t let what he considers temporary factors suppressing inflation affect monetary policy.

“The current shortfall in inflation from target [is] most likely due to transitory factors that will fade through 2018, pushing inflation back up to target,” Quarles said Thursday in Tokyo.

“Suffice to say, a deviation from our target of a few tenths of 1 percentage point, especially one I expect to fade, does not cause me great concern.”

 

Protect your check: Federal officials are warning of a spike in phishing campaigns during the IRS’s tax filing season, particularly those targeting information from would-be victims’ W-2 forms.

The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center issued an alert late Wednesday warning of an increase in W-2 phishing campaigns.

“This scam is just one of several new variations of IRS and tax-related phishing campaigns targeting W-2 information, indicating an increase in the interest of criminals in sensitive tax information,” the alert says.

 

Where’s the undo button? The National Association of State Treasurers (NAST) is urging Congress to reinstate a tax preference that was eliminated in the GOP tax-cut law, arguing that doing so would help state and local governments finance infrastructure projects.

The group wants Congress to restore the tax exemption for advance refunding bonds, which state and local governments issue to refinance their debt. The Hill’s Naomi Jagoda explains: http://bit.ly/2CcEbsv.

 

MARKET CHECK: Disparate. The three big U.S. indexes had weirdly mixed days. The Dow Jones industrial average was Thursday’s winner, closing with a 0.7 percent gain (164 points). The S&P 500 finished 0.1 percent higher, while the Nasdaq closed with a 0.1 percent loss.

 

GOOD TO KNOW

 

ODDS AND ENDS