Trump, Powell and interest rates
Digest more
Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers warned that President Donald Trump’s preference for the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate setting would trigger a surge in expectations for inflation, driving up long-term borrowing costs.
The yearslong project to spruce up central bank buildings in Washington, D.C., received little attention until recently
The dollar weakened as speculation arose over U.S. President Trump's potential dismissal of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. Concerns about the move affecting U.S. market stability heightened, while Trump criticized Powell for not cutting interest rates.
A new report shows inflation has picked up and analysts believe the prices of many goods increased, in part, because of President Trump’s tariffs. It will play into decisions by the Federal Reserve about when and whether to cut interest rates and comes as the president and his team have ramped up their pressure campaign on Fed Chair Jerome Powell.
First, consider the case of Richard Nixon and his Fed Chairman, Arthur Burns. At the end of 1969, after he was nominated, but before he took office, Burns was told by Nixon that his predecessor “was always six months too late doing anything.
US president’s offensive against Jay Powell has prompted swings in the dollar and lifted long-term inflation expectations