100+ datasets found
  1. T

    United States Fed Funds Interest Rate

    • tradingeconomics.com
    • ko.tradingeconomics.com
    • +13more
    csv, excel, json, xml
    Updated Nov 19, 2025
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    TRADING ECONOMICS (2025). United States Fed Funds Interest Rate [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/interest-rate
    Explore at:
    xml, excel, json, csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 19, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    TRADING ECONOMICS
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Aug 4, 1971 - Oct 29, 2025
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    The benchmark interest rate in the United States was last recorded at 4 percent. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - United States Fed Funds Rate - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.

  2. Federal Reserve Interest Rates, 1954-Present

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Mar 16, 2017
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    Federal Reserve (2017). Federal Reserve Interest Rates, 1954-Present [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/federalreserve/interest-rates
    Explore at:
    zip(7069 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 16, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    Federal Reserve Systemhttp://www.federalreserve.gov/
    Authors
    Federal Reserve
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    Context

    The Federal Reserve sets interest rates to promote conditions that achieve the mandate set by the Congress — high employment, low and stable inflation, sustainable economic growth, and moderate long-term interest rates. Interest rates set by the Fed directly influence the cost of borrowing money. Lower interest rates encourage more people to obtain a mortgage for a new home or to borrow money for an automobile or for home improvement. Lower rates encourage businesses to borrow funds to invest in expansion such as purchasing new equipment, updating plants, or hiring more workers. Higher interest rates restrain such borrowing by consumers and businesses.

    Content

    This dataset includes data on the economic conditions in the United States on a monthly basis since 1954. The federal funds rate is the interest rate at which depository institutions trade federal funds (balances held at Federal Reserve Banks) with each other overnight. The rate that the borrowing institution pays to the lending institution is determined between the two banks; the weighted average rate for all of these types of negotiations is called the effective federal funds rate. The effective federal funds rate is determined by the market but is influenced by the Federal Reserve through open market operations to reach the federal funds rate target. The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meets eight times a year to determine the federal funds target rate; the target rate transitioned to a target range with an upper and lower limit in December 2008. The real gross domestic product is calculated as the seasonally adjusted quarterly rate of change in the gross domestic product based on chained 2009 dollars. The unemployment rate represents the number of unemployed as a seasonally adjusted percentage of the labor force. The inflation rate reflects the monthly change in the Consumer Price Index of products excluding food and energy.

    Acknowledgements

    The interest rate data was published by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis' economic data portal. The gross domestic product data was provided by the US Bureau of Economic Analysis; the unemployment and consumer price index data was provided by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    Inspiration

    How does economic growth, unemployment, and inflation impact the Federal Reserve's interest rates decisions? How has the interest rate policy changed over time? Can you predict the Federal Reserve's next decision? Will the target range set in March 2017 be increased, decreased, or remain the same?

  3. T

    Japan Interest Rate

    • tradingeconomics.com
    • ru.tradingeconomics.com
    • +13more
    csv, excel, json, xml
    Updated Oct 30, 2025
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    TRADING ECONOMICS (2025). Japan Interest Rate [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/japan/interest-rate
    Explore at:
    excel, xml, json, csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 30, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    TRADING ECONOMICS
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Oct 2, 1972 - Oct 30, 2025
    Area covered
    Japan
    Description

    The benchmark interest rate in Japan was last recorded at 0.50 percent. This dataset provides - Japan Interest Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.

  4. FRED-interest-rate-spreads

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated May 23, 2024
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    SamAffolter (2024). FRED-interest-rate-spreads [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/samaffolter/fred-interest-rate-spreads
    Explore at:
    zip(243036 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 23, 2024
    Authors
    SamAffolter
    License

    http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/dbcl/1.0/http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/dbcl/1.0/

    Description

    Source is Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Retrieved from FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/"NAME OF MEASURE" Column names are "Name of Measure" from FRED's catalog.

    Group 1: Yield Curve Indicators These focus on the shape of the Treasury yield curve, comparing longer-term to shorter-term rates. They are primarily used to: Signal Economic Expectations: A normal curve (longer-term rates higher) suggests expectations of growth and possibly inflation. A flattening or inverted curve (short-term rates near or above long-term) could signal a potential slowdown or recession.

    Group 2: Monetary Policy and Market Expectations These spreads look at the difference between Treasury yields and the Federal Funds Rate, the primary tool of monetary policy. They indicate: Market vs. Fed Outlook: Widening spreads could suggest the market expects faster rate hikes or higher long-term inflation than the Fed is signaling. Narrowing spreads could mean the opposite. Risk-Taking: When these spreads widen, it can be a sign of investors moving from safe Treasuries to riskier assets in search of yield.

    Group 3: Credit Risk and Market Sentiment These spreads focus on corporate bond yields relative to Treasuries, highlighting the added compensation investors require for holding riskier corporate debt. They signal: Credit Conditions: Widening spreads suggest deteriorating credit conditions or lower risk tolerance among investors. Narrowing spreads suggest the opposite. Economic Confidence: Investors often demand higher premiums for corporate bonds during economic uncertainty, widening these spreads.

    Group 4: Breakeven Inflation Rates The breakeven inflation rate represents a measure of expected inflation derived from 30-Year Treasury Constant Maturity Securities (BC_30YEAR) and 30-Year Treasury Inflation-Indexed Constant Maturity Securities (TC_30YEAR). The latest value implies what market participants expect inflation to be in the next 30 years, on average.

  5. United States Interest Rate Forecast Dataset

    • focus-economics.com
    html
    Updated Oct 29, 2025
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    FocusEconomics (2025). United States Interest Rate Forecast Dataset [Dataset]. https://www.focus-economics.com/country-indicator/united-states/interest-rate/
    Explore at:
    htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 29, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    FocusEconomics
    License

    https://www.focus-economics.com/terms-and-conditions/https://www.focus-economics.com/terms-and-conditions/

    Time period covered
    2014 - 2025
    Area covered
    United States
    Variables measured
    forecast, united_states_interest_rate
    Description

    Monthly and long-term United States Interest Rate data: historical series and analyst forecasts curated by FocusEconomics.

  6. T

    Sweden Interest Rate

    • tradingeconomics.com
    • fa.tradingeconomics.com
    • +13more
    csv, excel, json, xml
    Updated Nov 5, 2025
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    TRADING ECONOMICS (2025). Sweden Interest Rate [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/sweden/interest-rate
    Explore at:
    csv, excel, xml, jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 5, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    TRADING ECONOMICS
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    May 26, 1994 - Nov 5, 2025
    Area covered
    Sweden
    Description

    The benchmark interest rate in Sweden was last recorded at 1.75 percent. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - Sweden Interest Rate - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.

  7. US Financial Indicators - 1974 to 2024

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Nov 25, 2024
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    Abhishek Bhatnagar (2024). US Financial Indicators - 1974 to 2024 [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/abhishekb7/us-financial-indicators-1974-to-2024
    Explore at:
    zip(15336 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 25, 2024
    Authors
    Abhishek Bhatnagar
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    U.S. Economic and Financial Dataset

    Dataset Description

    This dataset combines historical U.S. economic and financial indicators, spanning the last 50 years, to facilitate time series analysis and uncover patterns in macroeconomic trends. It is designed for exploring relationships between interest rates, inflation, economic growth, stock market performance, and industrial production.

    Key Features

    • Frequency: Monthly
    • Time Period: Last 50 years from Nov-24
    • Sources:
      • Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED)
      • Yahoo Finance

    Dataset Feature Description

    1. Interest Rate (Interest_Rate):

      • The effective federal funds rate, representing the interest rate at which depository institutions trade federal funds overnight.
    2. Inflation (Inflation):

      • The Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers, an indicator of inflation trends.
    3. GDP (GDP):

      • Real GDP measures the inflation-adjusted value of goods and services produced in the U.S.
    4. Unemployment Rate (Unemployment):

      • The percentage of the labor force that is unemployed and actively seeking work.
    5. Stock Market Performance (S&P500):

      • Monthly average of the adjusted close price, representing stock market trends.
    6. Industrial Production (Ind_Prod):

      • A measure of real output in the industrial sector, including manufacturing, mining, and utilities.

    Dataset Statistics

    1. Total Entries: 599
    2. Columns: 6
    3. Memory usage: 37.54 kB
    4. Data types: float64

    Feature Overview

    • Columns:
      • Interest_Rate: Monthly Federal Funds Rate (%)
      • Inflation: CPI (All Urban Consumers, Index)
      • GDP: Real GDP (Billions of Chained 2012 Dollars)
      • Unemployment: Unemployment Rate (%)
      • Ind_Prod: Industrial Production Index (2017=100)
      • S&P500: Monthly Average of S&P 500 Adjusted Close Prices

    Executive Summary

    This project explores the interconnected dynamics of key macroeconomic indicators and financial market trends over the past 50 years, leveraging data from the Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED) and Yahoo Finance. The dataset integrates critical variables such as the Federal Funds Rate, Inflation (CPI), Real GDP, Unemployment Rate, Industrial Production, and the S&P 500 Index, providing a holistic view of the U.S. economy and financial markets.

    The analysis focuses on uncovering relationships between these variables through time-series visualization, correlation analysis, and trend decomposition. Key findings are included in the Insights section. This project serves as a robust resource for understanding long-term economic trends, policy impacts, and market behavior. It is particularly valuable for students, researchers, policymakers, and financial analysts seeking to connect macroeconomic theory with real-world data.

    Potential Use Cases

    • Economic Analysis: Examine relationships between interest rates, inflation, GDP, and unemployment.
    • Stock Market Prediction: Study how macroeconomic indicators influence stock market trends.
    • Time Series Modeling: Perform ARIMA, VAR, or other models to forecast economic trends.
    • Cyclic Pattern Analysis: Identify how economic shocks and recoveries impact key indicators.

    Snap of Power Analysis

    imagehttps://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1b40e0ca-7d2e-4fbc-8cfd-df3f09e4fdb8">

    To ensure sufficient power, the dataset covers last 50 years of monthly data i.e., around 600 entries.

    Key Insights derived through EDA, time-series visualization, correlation analysis, and trend decomposition

    • Interest Rate and Inflation Dynamics: The interest Rate and inflation exhibit an inverse relationship, especially during periods of aggressive monetary tightening by the Federal Reserve.
    • Economic Growth and Market Performance: GDP growth and the S&P 500 Index show a positive correlation, reflecting how market performance often aligns with overall economic health.
    • Labor Market and Industrial Output: Unemployment and industrial production demonstrate a strong inverse relationship. Higher industrial output is typically associated with lower unemployment
    • Market Behavior During Economic Shocks: The S&P 500 experienced sharp declines during significant crises, such as the 2008 financial crash and the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. These events also triggered increased unemployment and contractions in GDP, highlighting the interplay between markets and the broader economy.
    • Correlation Highlights: S&P 500 and GDP have a strong positive correlation. Interest rates negatively correlate with GDP and inflation, reflecting monetary policy impacts. Unemployment is negatively correlated with industrial production but positively correlated with interest rates.

    Link to GitHub Repo

    https:/...

  8. T

    United Kingdom Interest Rate

    • tradingeconomics.com
    • pl.tradingeconomics.com
    • +13more
    csv, excel, json, xml
    Updated Nov 6, 2025
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    TRADING ECONOMICS (2025). United Kingdom Interest Rate [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/united-kingdom/interest-rate
    Explore at:
    json, csv, excel, xmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 6, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    TRADING ECONOMICS
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Sep 20, 1971 - Nov 6, 2025
    Area covered
    United Kingdom
    Description

    The benchmark interest rate in the United Kingdom was last recorded at 4 percent. This dataset provides - United Kingdom Interest Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.

  9. T

    United States 30-Year Mortgage Rate

    • tradingeconomics.com
    • pt.tradingeconomics.com
    • +13more
    csv, excel, json, xml
    Updated Nov 26, 2025
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    TRADING ECONOMICS (2025). United States 30-Year Mortgage Rate [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/30-year-mortgage-rate
    Explore at:
    csv, json, xml, excelAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 26, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    TRADING ECONOMICS
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Apr 1, 1971 - Nov 26, 2025
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    30 Year Mortgage Rate in the United States decreased to 6.23 percent in November 26 from 6.26 percent in the previous week. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for the United States 30 Year Mortgage Rate.

  10. o

    Tax interest rates

    • data.ontario.ca
    • datasets.ai
    • +1more
    csv
    Updated Oct 1, 2025
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    Finance (2025). Tax interest rates [Dataset]. https://data.ontario.ca/dataset/tax-interest-rates
    Explore at:
    csv(4733)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 1, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Finance
    License

    https://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontariohttps://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontario

    Time period covered
    Oct 1, 2025
    Area covered
    Ontario
    Description

    Interest is charged if payment is not received by the due date. Remember: if the due date falls on a weekend or holiday, your payment is due the next working day.

    The Ministry of Finance also applies interest to amounts the ministry owes to individuals and corporations.

    Tax interest is compounded daily and interest rates are reset every 3 months.

    Note: Provincial land tax interest rates are not reset every three months. Provincial land tax interest rates are summarized on the "https://www.ontario.ca/document/provincial-land-tax">provincial land tax webpage.

    Note: Interest rates do not apply to the Estate Administration Tax Act, 1998.

    Current interest rates (October 1, 2025 to December 31, 2025):

    • 8% on taxes you owe to the ministry
    • 2% on taxes you overpaid
    • 5% on taxes or refunds you are eligible for as a result of a successful appeal or objection
    • 6% on late International Fuel Tax Agreement payments
    • 6% on International Fuel Tax Agreement refunds the ministry has not paid you within 90 days

    You can download the dataset to view the historical tax interest rates.

    Non-Resident Speculation Tax (NRST)

    (1) Interest on tax you overpaid begins to accrue 40 business days after a complete NRST rebate or refund application is received by the Ministry of Finance to the date the rebate or refund is paid.

    (2) On refunds you are eligible for as a result of a successful appeal or objection of a NRST refund/rebate disallowance, the interest rate is the same rate as though you had overpaid and will begin to accrue 40 business days after a complete NRST rebate or refund application is received by the Ministry of Finance to the date the rebate or refund is paid. Refunds as a result of a successful appeal or objection of NRST that was paid pursuant to a Notice of Assessment, interest will accrue at the higher appeals/objection rate, beginning to accrue from the date of payment to the date the rebate or refund is paid.

  11. T

    Russia Interest Rate

    • tradingeconomics.com
    • id.tradingeconomics.com
    • +13more
    csv, excel, json, xml
    Updated Oct 24, 2025
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    TRADING ECONOMICS (2025). Russia Interest Rate [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/interest-rate
    Explore at:
    csv, xml, excel, jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 24, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    TRADING ECONOMICS
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    May 20, 2003 - Oct 24, 2025
    Area covered
    Russia
    Description

    The benchmark interest rate in Russia was last recorded at 16.50 percent. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - Russia Interest Rate - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.

  12. d

    5.04 Bond Rating (summary)

    • catalog.data.gov
    • open.tempe.gov
    • +9more
    Updated Nov 1, 2025
    + more versions
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    City of Tempe (2025). 5.04 Bond Rating (summary) [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/5-04-bond-rating-summary-b40cc
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 1, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    City of Tempe
    Description

    An important indicator of the financial strength of a governmental entity is its bond rating. The bond rating is similar to the credit score of an individual – the higher the score, the better the ability to borrow money to finance purchases at a lower interest rate. Similarly, the higher the bond rating for a governmental entity, the more opportunities to borrow money for capital needs at lower interest rates. A high bond rating is an excellent indicator of the overall financial health of a government.This measure is obtained each year when the city seeks to issue bonds to finance its’ projects. As part of this process, bond ratings are always obtained from the rating agencies: Standard & Poor’s. Fitch Ratings and Moody's Investor Service. This page provides data for the Bond Rating performance measure. Bond ratings are a reflection of the financial strength of an entity. A high rating means an entity can issue bonds to finance capital projects at lower interest rates; lower rates result in less interest to be paid on the repayment of the bonds. Ultimately, this lowers the costs of our capital projects to our taxpayers. The performance measure dashboard is available at 5.04 Bond Rating. Additional Information Source: Standard & Poors, Moody's Investor Service, and Fitch Ratings are the major bond rating agencies in the United States and are widely used by governmental and non-governmental entities throughout the country.Contact: Jerry HartContact E-Mail: Jerry_Hart@tempe.govData Source Type: ExcelPreparation Method: ManualPublish Frequency: AnnuallyPublish Method: ManualData Dictionary

  13. US Economy Case Study

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Mar 29, 2022
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    ChimaVOgu (2022). US Economy Case Study [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/chimavogu/us-economy-dataset
    Explore at:
    zip(1667902 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 29, 2022
    Authors
    ChimaVOgu
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    For a quick summary of the case study, please click "US Economy Powerpoint" and download the Powerpoint.

    This dataset was inspired by rising prices for essential goods, the abnormally high inflation rate in March of 7.9 percent of this year, and the 30 trillion-dollar debt that we have. I was extremely curious to see how sustainable this is for the average American and if wages are increasing at the same rate to help combat this inflation. This is not politically driven in the slightest nor was this made to put the blame on Americans. This dataset was inspired by rising prices for essential goods and the abnormally high inflation rate in March of 7.9 percent of this year. I was extremely curious to see how sustainable this is for the average American and if wages are increasing at the same rate to help combat this inflation. This is not politically driven in the slightest nor was this made to put the blame on Americans. All of the datasets were obtained from third party sources websites such as https://dqydj.com/household-income-by-year/ and https://www.usinflationcalculator.com/inflation/historical-inflation-rates/ and only excluding https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/ASPUS, which is first-party data.

    This dataset was inspired by rising prices for essential goods and the abnormally high inflation rate in March of 7.9 percent of this year. I was extremely curious to see how sustainable this is for the average American and if wages are increasing at the same rate to help combat this inflation. This is not politically driven in the slightest nor was this made to put the blame on Americans. This dataset was inspired by rising prices for essential goods and the abnormally high inflation rate in March of 7.9 percent of this year. I was extremely curious to see how sustainable this is for the average American and if wages are increasing at the same rate to help combat this inflation. This is not politically driven in the slightest nor was this made to put the blame on Americans. All of the datasets were obtained from third party sources websites such as https://dqydj.com/household-income-by-year/ and https://www.usinflationcalculator.com/inflation/historical-inflation-rates/ and only excluding https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/ASPUS, which is first-party data.

    I labeled all of the datasets to be self-explanatory based off of the title of the datasets. The US Economy Notebook has most of the code that I used as well as the four of the six phases of data analysis. The last two phases are in the US Economy Powerpoint. The "US Historical Inflation Rates" dataset could have also been labeled "The Inflation Of The US Dollar Month By Month". Lastly, the Average Sales of Houses in Jan is just a filtered version of "Average Sales of Houses in the US" dataset.

  14. #1 Premium Gold Market Dataset

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Dec 13, 2023
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    Haitham Alyahyaai (2023). #1 Premium Gold Market Dataset [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/galaxy999/20-years-of-gold-historical-data
    Explore at:
    zip(1791485 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 13, 2023
    Authors
    Haitham Alyahyaai
    License

    https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.htmlhttps://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html

    Description

    https://www.googleapis.com/download/storage/v1/b/kaggle-user-content/o/inbox%2F5445802%2F232b3878bd6f687f8337100be97a2059%2F2daa5d51-a570-4240-a994-21b429313d86.webp?generation=1702448669305664&alt=media" alt="">

    The raw data that is used in this dataset is the basic OHLC time series dataset for a gold market of the last 20 years collected and verified from different exchanges. This dataset contains over 8677 daily candle prices (rows) and in order to make it wealthy, extra datasets were merged with it to provide more details to each data frame. The sub-datasets contain historical economic information such as interest rates, inflation rates, and others that are highly related and affecting the gold market movement.

    Raw dataset:

    Time Range: 1988-08-01 to 2023-11-10 Number of data entries: 4050 Number of features: 4 (open, high, low, close OHLC daily candle price)

    What are done to prepare this dataset : 1. Starting Exploratory Data Analysis (EDA) for all the raw datasets. 2. Find and fill in missing days. 3. Merge all the datasets into one master dataset based on the time index. 4. Verify the merge process. 5. Check and remove Duplicates. 6. Check and fill in missing values. 7. Including the basic technical indicators and price moving averages. 8. Outliers Inspection and treatment by different methods. 9. Adding targets. 10. Feature Analysis to identify the importance of each feature. 11. Final check.

    After data preparation and feature engineering:

    Time Range: 1999-12-30 to 2023-10-01

    Number of data entries: 8677

    Number of featuers: 28

    Features list: open, high, low, close (OHLC daily candle price) dxy_open, dxy_close, dxy_high, dxy_low, fred_fedfunds, usintr, usiryy (Ecnomic inducators) RSI, MACD, MACD_signal, MACD_hist, ADX, CCI (Technical indicators) ROC SMA_10, SMA_20, EMA_10, EMA_20, SMA_50, EMA_50, SMA_100, SMA_200, EMA_100, EMA_200 (Moving avrages)

    Targets List: next_1_day_price next_3_day_price next_7_day_price next_30_day_price next_1_day_Price_Change next_3_day_Price_Change next_7_day_Price_Change next_30_day_Price_Change next_30_day_Price_Change next_1_day_price_direction( Up, Same ,Down) next_3_day_price_direction( Up, Same ,Down) next_7_day_price_direction( Up, Same ,Down) next_30_day_price_direction( Up, Same ,Down)

    Abbreviations of Features: dxy = US Dollar Index fred_fedfunds= Effective Federal Funds Rate usintr= US Interest Rate usiryy= US Inflation Rate YOY RSI= Relative Strength Index MACD= Moving Average Convergence Divergence ADX= Avrerage Directional Index CCI=Commodity Channel Index ROC= Rate of Change SMA= Simple Moving Average EMA= Exponential Moving Average

  15. T

    Brazil Interest Rate

    • tradingeconomics.com
    • tr.tradingeconomics.com
    • +13more
    csv, excel, json, xml
    Updated Sep 17, 2025
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    TRADING ECONOMICS (2025). Brazil Interest Rate [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/brazil/interest-rate
    Explore at:
    xml, json, csv, excelAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Sep 17, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    TRADING ECONOMICS
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Mar 5, 1999 - Nov 5, 2025
    Area covered
    Brazil
    Description

    The benchmark interest rate in Brazil was last recorded at 15 percent. This dataset provides - Brazil Interest Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.

  16. B-9.1, High Income Returns by Income Level and Average Tax Rate

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.ca.gov
    • +1more
    Updated Nov 27, 2024
    + more versions
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    California Franchise Tax Board (2024). B-9.1, High Income Returns by Income Level and Average Tax Rate [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/b-9-1-high-income-returns-by-income-level-and-average-tax-rate
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 27, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    California Franchise Tax Boardhttp://ftb.ca.gov/
    Description

    The dataset contains statistics for high income resident tax returns by income level and average tax rate.

  17. Historical 3-Month Treasury Bill Rates (2000-2023)

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Aug 3, 2024
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    Subhanjan (2024). Historical 3-Month Treasury Bill Rates (2000-2023) [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/subhanjan33/historical-3-month-treasury-bill-rates-2000-2023
    Explore at:
    zip(74473 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 3, 2024
    Authors
    Subhanjan
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Historical 3-Month Treasury Bill Rates (2000-2023) Dataset

    Track the Pulse of the Financial Market with Detailed T-Bill Data

    Dataset Description

    This dataset contains historical 3-month Treasury Bill rates, sourced from Yahoo Finance. The dataset spans from January 3, 2000, to December 31, 2023, and provides daily prices along with adjusted close prices and volumes. This data is crucial for financial analysts, economists, and researchers who are interested in interest rate trends and their impact on the economy.

    Table of Contents

    1. Introduction
    2. Data Source
    3. Dataset Structure
    4. Data Collection and Processing
    5. Usage and Applications
    6. License
    7. Acknowledgements

    Introduction

    Treasury Bills (T-Bills) are short-term government securities with maturities of one year or less. They are sold at a discount from their face value and do not pay interest before maturity. This dataset specifically focuses on the 3-month T-Bill rates, which are commonly used as a risk-free rate benchmark in various financial models and analyses.

    The 3-month T-Bill rate is considered a reliable indicator of short-term interest rates and economic conditions. It is widely used in the valuation of financial instruments, risk management, and macroeconomic analysis.

    Data Source

    The data was sourced from Yahoo Finance. The Ticker symbol used for the 3-month Treasury Bill rates is ^IRX.

    Dataset Structure

    The dataset is provided in CSV format with the following columns:

    • Date: The date of the recorded interest rate (in YYYY-MM-DD format).
    • Open: The opening price of the 3-month T-Bill rate on the given date.
    • High: The highest price of the 3-month T-Bill rate on the given date.
    • Low: The lowest price of the 3-month T-Bill rate on the given date.
    • Close: The closing price of the 3-month T-Bill rate on the given date.
    • Adj Close: The adjusted close price for the 3-month T-Bill rate, adjusted for any corporate actions.
    • Volume: The trading volume of the 3-month T-Bill rate on the given date (although typically 0 for T-Bills).

    Example:

    DateOpenHighLowCloseAdj CloseVolume
    2000-01-035.235.305.235.275.270
    2000-01-045.295.295.275.275.270
    2000-01-055.305.305.265.275.270
    .....................
    2023-12-290.0120.0120.0120.0120.0120

    Data Collection and Processing

    The data was collected from Yahoo Finance using the Python yfinance library. The following steps were performed to process the data:

    1. Data Retrieval: Historical data was fetched for the 3-month Treasury Bill using the yfinance API.
    2. Data Cleaning: Missing values were dropped to ensure data consistency.
    3. Conversion: The adjusted close prices were used for analysis as they account for any corporate actions.

    Usage and Applications

    This dataset can be used for various financial analyses and modeling, including but not limited to:

    • Interest Rate Modeling: Use the dataset to model interest rate behaviors using stochastic models such as the Vasicek model, Cox-Ingersoll-Ross model, etc.
    • Risk Management: Assess the risk-free rate for evaluating investment performance and calculating risk premiums.
    • Econometric Analysis: Conduct time series analysis to study trends, seasonality, and economic cycles.
    • Financial Education: Serve as a resource for educational purposes in finance and economics courses.
    • Macroeconomic Research: Analyze the relationship between short-term interest rates and macroeconomic indicators such as GDP growth, inflation, and employment rates.

    License

    This dataset is made available under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. You are free to use, modify, and distribute the data, provided proper attribution is given.

    Acknowledgements

    Special thanks to Yahoo Finance for providing the historical data and the Python community for the yfinance library, which facilitated data retrieval and processing.

  18. m

    WisdomTree Interest Rate Hedged High Yield Bond Fund - Price Series

    • macro-rankings.com
    csv, excel
    Updated Dec 18, 2013
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    macro-rankings (2013). WisdomTree Interest Rate Hedged High Yield Bond Fund - Price Series [Dataset]. https://www.macro-rankings.com/Markets/ETFs/HYZD-US
    Explore at:
    csv, excelAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 18, 2013
    Dataset authored and provided by
    macro-rankings
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    united states
    Description

    Index Time Series for WisdomTree Interest Rate Hedged High Yield Bond Fund. The frequency of the observation is daily. Moving average series are also typically included. Under normal circumstances, at least 80% of the fund"s total assets (exclusive of collateral held from securities lending) will be invested in the constituent securities of the index and investments that have economic characteristics that are substantially identical to the economic characteristics of such constituent securities. The index is comprised of long and short positions. The fund is non-diversified.

  19. F

    Data from: Effective Federal Funds Rate

    • fred.stlouisfed.org
    json
    Updated Dec 2, 2025
    + more versions
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    (2025). Effective Federal Funds Rate [Dataset]. https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/EFFR
    Explore at:
    jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 2, 2025
    License

    https://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-citation-requiredhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-citation-required

    Description

    View data of the Effective Federal Funds Rate, or the interest rate depository institutions charge each other for overnight loans of funds.

  20. Realistic Loan Approval Dataset | US & Canada

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Nov 1, 2025
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    Parth Patel2130 (2025). Realistic Loan Approval Dataset | US & Canada [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/parthpatel2130/realistic-loan-approval-dataset-us-and-canada
    Explore at:
    zip(1717268 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 1, 2025
    Authors
    Parth Patel2130
    License

    Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 (CC BY-NC 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Canada, United States
    Description

    🏦 Synthetic Loan Approval Dataset

    A Realistic, High-Quality Dataset for Credit Risk Modelling

    🎯 Why This Dataset?

    Most loan datasets on Kaggle have unrealistic patterns where:

    1. ❌ Credit scores don't matter
    2. ❌ Approval logic is backwards
    3. ❌ Models learn nonsense patterns

    Unlike most loan datasets available online, this one is built on real banking criteria from US and Canadian financial institutions. Drawing from 3 years of hands-on finance industry experience, the dataset incorporates realistic correlations and business logic that reflect how actual lending decisions are made. This makes it perfect for data scientists looking to build portfolio projects that showcase not just coding ability, but genuine understanding of credit risk modelling.

    📊 Dataset Overview

    MetricValue
    Total Records50,000
    Features20 (customer_id + 18 predictors + 1 target)
    Target Distribution55% Approved, 45% Rejected
    Missing Values0 (Complete dataset)
    Product TypesCredit Card, Personal Loan, Line of Credit
    MarketUnited States & Canada
    Use CaseBinary Classification (Approved/Rejected)

    🔑 Key Features

    Identifier:

    -Customer ID (unique identifier for each application)

    Demographics:

    -Age, Occupation Status, Years Employed

    Financial Profile:

    -Annual Income, Credit Score, Credit History Length -Savings/Assets, Current Debt

    Credit Behaviour:

    -Defaults on File, Delinquencies, Derogatory Marks

    Loan Request:

    -Product Type, Loan Intent, Loan Amount, Interest Rate

    Calculated Ratios:

    -Debt-to-Income, Loan-to-Income, Payment-to-Income

    💡 What Makes This Dataset Special?

    1️⃣ Real-World Approval Logic The dataset implements actual banking criteria: - DTI ratio > 50% = automatic rejection - Defaults on file = instant reject - Credit score bands match real lending thresholds - Employment verification for loans ≥$20K

    2️⃣ Realistic Correlations - Higher income → Better credit scores - Older applicants → Longer credit history - Students → Lower income, special treatment for small loans - Loan intent affects approval (Education best, Debt Consolidation worst)

    3️⃣ Product-Specific Rules - Credit Cards: More lenient, higher limits - Personal Loans: Standard criteria, up to $100K - Line of Credit: Capped at $50K, manual review for high amounts

    4️⃣ Edge Cases Included - Young applicants (age 18) building first credit - Students with thin credit files - Self-employed with variable income - High debt-to-income ratios - Multiple delinquencies

    🎓 Perfect For - Machine Learning Practice: Binary classification with real patterns - Credit Risk Modelling: Learn actual lending criteria - Portfolio Projects: Build impressive, explainable models - Feature Engineering: Rich dataset with meaningful relationships - Business Analytics: Understand financial decision-making

    📈 Quick Stats

    Approval Rates by Product - Credit Card: 60.4% more lenient) - Personal Loan: 46.9 (standard) - Line of Credit: 52.6% (moderate)

    Loan Intent (Best → Worst Approval Odds) 1. Education (63% approved) 2. Personal (58% approved) 3. Medical/Home (52% approved) 4. Business (48% approved) 5. Debt Consolidation (40% approved)

    Credit Score Distribution - Mean: 644 - Range: 300-850 - Realistic bell curve around 600-700

    Income Distribution - Mean: $50,063 - Median: $41,608 - Range: $15K - $250K

    🎯 Expected Model Performance

    With proper feature engineering and tuning: - Accuracy: 75-85% - ROC-AUC: 0.80-0.90 - F1-Score: 0.75-0.85

    Important: Feature importance should show: 1. Credit Score (most important) 2. Debt-to-Income Ratio 3. Delinquencies 4. Loan Amount 5. Income

    If your model shows different patterns, something's wrong!

    🏆 Use Cases & Projects

    Beginner - Binary classification with XGBoost/Random Forest - EDA and visualization practice - Feature importance analysis

    Intermediate - Custom threshold optimization (profit maximization) - Cost-sensitive learning (false positive vs false negative) - Ensemble methods and stacking

    Advanced - Explainable AI (SHAP, LIME) - Fairness analysis across demographics - Production-ready API with FastAPI/Flask - Streamlit deployment with business rules

    ⚠️ Important Notes

    This is SYNTHETIC Data - Generated based on real banking criteria - No real customer data was used - Safe for public sharing and portfolio use

    Limitations - Simplified approval logic (real banks use 100+ factors) - No temporal component (no time series) - Single country/currency assumed (USD) - No external factors (economy, market conditions)

    Educational Purpose This dataset is designed for: - Learning credit risk modeling - Portfolio projects - ML practice - Understanding lending criteria

    NOT for: - Actual lending decisions - Financial advice - Production use without validation

    🤝 Contributing

    Found an issue? Have suggestions? - Open an issue on GitHub - Suggest i...

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TRADING ECONOMICS (2025). United States Fed Funds Interest Rate [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/interest-rate

United States Fed Funds Interest Rate

United States Fed Funds Interest Rate - Historical Dataset (1971-08-04/2025-10-29)

Explore at:
116 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
xml, excel, json, csvAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
Nov 19, 2025
Dataset authored and provided by
TRADING ECONOMICS
License

Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically

Time period covered
Aug 4, 1971 - Oct 29, 2025
Area covered
United States
Description

The benchmark interest rate in the United States was last recorded at 4 percent. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - United States Fed Funds Rate - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.

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