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Trump Says He ‘Maybe’ Regrets Picking Fed's Powell, WSJ Reports

Published 10/23/2018, 08:44 PM
Updated 10/23/2018, 09:00 PM
© Bloomberg. Jerome Powell, governor of the U.S. Federal Reserve and President Donald Trump's nominee as chairman of the Federal Reserve, right, pauses while speaking while Trump listens during a nomination announcement in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S. Photographer: Olivier Douliery/Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump stepped up his attacks on Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, saying he “maybe” regrets appointing him to the post and demurring when asked under what circumstances he would fire the central bank chief.

Trump told the Wall Street Journal in an interview Tuesday that he was intentionally sending a direct message to Powell that he wanted lower interest rates, even as he acknowledged that the central bank is an independent entity.

Trump said in the interview that Powell “almost looks like he’s happy raising interest rates” and that is “too early to tell, but maybe” he regrets appointing him.

Trump sidestepped a question on what circumstances would lead him to remove Powell. “I don’t know,” Trump said. That contrasted with his response to a similar question on Oct. 11, when he answered, ““I’m not going to fire him.”

The law governing the Federal Reserve allows its governors to be “removed for cause by the president,” but it doesn’t specify what “cause” means.

Trump has repeatedly criticized the Fed for rate increases, ratcheting up his rhetoric in recent weeks. Trump last week called the Fed his “biggest threat” and blamed it for stock market sell-offs during the past month. Earlier in the month he slammed the central bank as “out of control” and said it was “going loco.”

The Fed has raised its benchmark policy rate three times this year, by a quarter-percentage point on each occasion, bringing to six the number of hikes since Trump was inaugurated. The target range for the federal funds rate, currently at 2 percent to 2.25 percent, is low by historical standards. When factoring in inflation, the rate on short-term borrowing is near zero percent.

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Trump’s criticisms mark a departure from the practices of his recent predecessors. Presidents for more than two decades avoided public comments on Fed policy as a way of demonstrating respect for the institution’s independence.

Latest comments

I honestly think Trump has no idea how the economy, interest rates, inflation and all that works. He simply wants the stock market to keep plowing ahead so he can win elections, future bubbles and recessions/depressions be damned.
Exactly what I think too. There's a functional relationship between Interest rate, Inflation, Unemployment and GDP. All must be considered when deciding monetary stance; whether to stimulate the economy or to slow things down. Trump should be altruistic with his comments and actions.
It's not the current rate hike that bothers me, but rather that Powell intends to continue raising interest rates without the data that says it is necessary!
Of course what's guiding Fed's decision is data, precisely, data such as; inflation (which is rising), unemployment (lowest since a decade), GDP (increased in Q2). So, the Fed needs yo keep this variables in check if not, the economy might burst into a spiral inflation and that's pretty bad for the economy. Remember tax-cut effect; companies now have more money to invest and buyback stocks, leading to increase in wages of workers and as such they can take in more workers. On the flip side, if Fed doesn't check that, there might be a burst in the economy (inflation) and you know what that means, Dollar value diminishes.
The Volker Rule...Powell is playing with it. 5% reduction in Gov. Spending smells RECESSION.
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