Trump ‘Won’t Fire’ Jerome Powell, But He Does Know A Guy Who Would Make A Great Fed Chair…

Back on August 21, I published something here called “Do Not Underestimate Donald Trump When It Comes To The Fed“.

That post was an effort to put what were, at the time, Trump’s latest comments about Jerome Powell in the context of what was happening in Turkey, where President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s insistence on pro-cyclical monetary policy finally ushered in the collapse of the Turkish lira.

Starting in February (i.e., just after Powell took the reins from Janet Yellen), I began drawing a parallel between Trump and Erdogan. In a February post for Dealbreaker, I explicitly said it was just a matter of time before the President of the United States adopted the playbook of the Turkish autocrat when it comes to commandeering the country’s central bank. The post linked above was yet another effort to make that connection. Here are some excerpts:

The idea that Trump is going to sit idly by while Jerome Powell drives the policy divergence with America’s trade partners ever wider on the way to pushing the dollar higher and, by extension, fighting China and Europe’s trade battles for them, is silly.

Suddenly, former traders and FX analysts have become political scientists and historians on the way to making claims about what Trump “can”, “can’t” and “won’t” do, when it comes to the Fed. Well sorry guys and gals, that’s not your area of expertise. Trump will try to overstep here if he runs out of other options for “winning” his trade war. If he gets irritated enough, he’ll just remove Powell on the excuse the Fed chair is acting against America’s security interests.

You think I’m joking, but I’m not and if you don’t think that’s at least possible, then you haven’t been paying attention for the past 15 months.

By late August (i.e., by the time that post was written), Trump had already attacked Powell and the Fed on multiple occasions. At Jackson Hole, several Fed officials defended their independence and a September hike was already baked in by the time Powell delivered what was (rightly or wrongly) characterized as a “dovish” speech in Wyoming.

Fast forward to last week and Powell was busy talking up the U.S. economy on the way to reiterating the need for further gradual rate hikes. Between his words and more strong U.S. economic data, the bond market finally “listened”. Long end yields exploded higher. Ultimately, the bond rout catalyzed a harrowing selloff in stocks.

Less than two hours after the market close on Wednesday, while speaking to reporters on the on tarmac in Pennsylvania, Trump said the Fed has “gone crazy.”

That was clearly a response to the selloff on Wall Street and later Wednesday evening, he went further still, calling the Fed “loco” in comments carried by Fox News. “I don’t know what their problem is”, he said.

To be clear, “their problem” is Donald Trump, and more specifically, his late-cycle fiscal stimulus and tariffs, both of which are inflationary.

Well, on Thursday, Trump made it abundantly clear that his “crazy” comment on Wednesday afternoon wasn’t just an off-the-cuff remark. Rather, he is intent on influencing Fed policy. Here’s what he said during a characteristically manic phone interview with Fox & Friends:

The Fed is going wild. The problem [causing the market drop] in my opinion is Treasury and the Fed. The Fed is going loco and there’s no reason for them to do it. I’m not happy about it.

And he wasn’t done. Here’s a video of Trump chatting with reporters about the Fed in the Oval Office on Thursday, a spectacle that found the President literally saying that he “won’t fire” Jerome Powell:

 

Obviously, the punchline there is that Trump says he knows “better than [the Fed] does” about monetary policy, but don’t let the allusion to what Janet Yellen supposedly “did” for Obama be lost on you.

During the campaign, Trump accused Yellen of “doing political things” on the way to creating “a big, fat bubble” in the U.S. equity market. At the time, he pitched that as a bad thing; something akin to a nefarious conspiracy.

Now that he’s President, he wants Jerome Powell to do the exact same thing.

And as if that’s not ironic enough, do note that it was just one month ago when, in remarks delivered during a Brookings Institution conference, Yellen said this:

By keeping interest rates unusually low after the zero lower bound no longer binds, the lower-for-longer approach promises, in effect, to allow the economy to boom. The FOMC needs to make a credible statement endorsing such an approach, ideally before the next downturn.

That is Yellen implicitly endorsing pro-cyclical monetary policy during late-stage expansions, or, more to the point, precisely what Donald Trump is arguing for right now.

Had he just been willing to swallow his pride and keep Yellen, he’d have a Fed chair who is not only adored by risk takers the world over, but also predisposed to allowing the economy to overheat.

Finally – and I don’t know how many times I’m going to have to say this – when you hear people say that Trump “can’t fire” Jerome Powell, the rejoinder is simply this: YES. HE. CAN. He can fire Powell “for cause” and if you think for a second that a man who is willing to lampoon sexual assault survivors at a Mississippi campaign rally would be unwilling to step all over decorum by accusing Powell of acting against the interests of the United States on the way to removing him, well then you are either being deliberately obtuse, or else you’re just hopelessly naive.

And as the President made abundantly clear at the tail end of the clip shown above, he, like Erdogan, knows that when you want something done “right”, you’ve gotta do it yourself.


 

Leave a Reply to Lance ManlyCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

9 thoughts on “Trump ‘Won’t Fire’ Jerome Powell, But He Does Know A Guy Who Would Make A Great Fed Chair…

  1. Trump also doesn’t seem to understand, although he claimed to know more than the Fed, that the Treasury doesn’t borrow money at the Fed interest rates, but at the rates bid for its notes at the Treasury auctions. There is definitely a correlation, but not the one that Trump stated. But there again, he still believes that tariffs are paid by the exporting company as opposed to being an extra tax.

      1. From Section 10 of the Federal Reserve Act:

        “…Upon the expiration of the term of any appointive member of the Federal Reserve Board in office on the date of enactment of the Banking Act of 1935, the President shall fix the term of the successor to such member at not to exceed fourteen years, as designated by the President at the time of nomination, but in such manner as to provide for the expiration of the term of not more than one member in any two-year period, and thereafter each member shall hold office for a term of fourteen years from the expiration of the term of his predecessor, unless sooner removed for cause by the President.”

        Nowhere in the article does it state what exactly cause is determined as, thus the biggest hurdle that would prevent Trump from firing Powell would be the historical precedent; something the current president has had no qualms with breaching in past actions.

  2. I wonder if the markets would greet Trump’s firing of Powell with the same thunderous applause they had for Erdogan’s and Bolsonaro’s victories.

    Also, who, exactly, is going to stop Trump from firing Powell? This Congress? This Supreme Court? This financial media? The demos? We live in a banana republic. We just have a lot of 🍌.

  3. You’ve mentioned Yellen’s “lower for longer” commitment in the context of the current hiking cycle in several of your articles, but my understanding of what she’s pushing for has nothing to do with the current pace of tightening.

    A “lower for longer” commitment would be a unconventional policy tool that could be used instead of (or to reduce the needed size of) Quantitative Easing. The commitment wound be to allow inflation to modestly overshoot target after a recession, with the goal of reducing expected real interest rates.

    The commitment would come when the economy is depressed; not now. Even if the Fed endorsed this policy today, it wouldn’t change anything in the current hiking cycle.

  4. A la Erdogan: there’s really only the US Senate between Trump and the appointment of his son-in-law – J. Kushner himself – from Fed Chair…. Feeling secure?

  5. So much power has been ceded to the POTUS over the last five decades, and more by the day, that I don’t see any way out of it.

NEWSROOM crewneck & prints