Panic! The Fed’s under attack!
The dollar and Treasury prices swooned last week as markets began to fret that President Trump will replace Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell with a “dove” who will cut rates too quickly and re-ignite inflation when Powell’s term as chairman expires next May. Leave aside that markets chose to ignore that Chairman Powell presided over the worst inflation outcome in 40 years and personally spearheaded the Fed’s September policy error. Betting markets now favor current Fed Governor and “Nerd King” Christopher Waller as the nominee since “Two Face” flipped yet again to become the first Fed Governor to suggest a rate cut at the July meeting.
Markets were spooked by a Wall Street Journal article claiming that President Trump might name Chairman Powell’s replacement in September to undermine his authority for the rest of the term.11 The White House “insiders” speaking to the Journal noted that in addition to Governor Waller, President Trump is considering former Governor Kevin Warsh, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, National Economic Council Chairman Kevin Hassett, and former World Bank head, David Malpass. But a day later, a White House spokesperson told the Financial Timesthat no decision is “imminent” and that the President is spoilt for choice.22
Meanwhile, the President himself told reporters that “I know within three or four people who all I’m going to pick. [Powell] goes out pretty soon, fortunately, because I think he’s terrible,” a description President Trump regularly applies to the man he refers to as “Too Late” Powell and (lately) complains hasn’t cut interest rates quickly enough. But he hasn’t always thought that. When he campaigned for president, he complained that the Powell Fed had been too easy with policy, reflecting a top concern of his voters, inflation.33
What gives? The usual Trumpian chaos?
Seriously, not literally
Just after President Trump was elected the first time, Peter Thiel admonished the press for taking him literally but not seriously, noting that his voters instead “take him seriously but not literally.” One reason his voters take him seriously is that while President Trump says (and tweets) a lot of things ranging from blunt (often unwelcome) truths to wild exaggerations or outright falsehoods, in contrast to most other politicians he keeps or at least tries to keep his pledges to voters. Consider the following list of campaign promises that President Trump has made:
- End illegal immigration, deport existing illegal immigrants and end birthright citizenship;
- Withdraw from climate accords and expand fossil fuel production;
- Implement universal tariffs;
- Eliminate taxes on tips, overtime and Social Security benefits;
- Deregulate;
- Bring bureaucracies under control by reasserting Executive authority;
- Use all Federal powers, including the military, to maintain civil order;
- Eliminate the Department of Education;
- No more foreign wars;
- Cut Federal spending and the deficit;
- Bring down inflation and curtail the Fed’s powers.
He has only been president for just over five months and – with the arguable exceptions of the last three – he has already either made good on each promise or taken steps to implement them.
Breaking promises?
Now let’s consider the last three. While there were times over the last few weeks where he gave the impression that he might be dragging the US into another Middle East quagmire, in the end Trump allowed Israel to do all the dangerous work, suffer all the casualties and property damage, and spend billions on its air campaign and missile defense, while the US came in at the last minute with a relatively low-risk mission that nonetheless re-established US deterrence for anyone wanting to test his resolve. (As a bonus, he may or may not have taken out Iran’s nuclear program; realistically no one knows this early.)
What about spending and the deficit? According to the Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO’s) 10-year projections, the “Big Beautiful Bill” (BBB) will blow out the already unsustainable deficit versus existing legislation. But the CBO measure, though required by law, simply reflects the difference between Congress’s current make-believe future and its yesteryear fantasy. To see what the BBB really does, you need to focus on expenditure and taxation through the end of this Congress, i.e. 2026, relative to 2024. Fiscal year 2025 spending falls by $197 billion, or 3% of GDP, versus 2024 spending.44 That’s not nearly enough to put the US on a sustainable path (and much of that spending bounces back in 2026), but it is a remarkable feat nonetheless when one considers that since 1965 Federal spending has fallen in nominal terms only once, in 2011 when sequestration required by the Budget Control Act of 2011 forced 2.3% of GDP in cuts.
Thus, even in arenas where he must herd the cats in Congress or navigate the complexities of an increasingly unstable world, President Trump appears to be trying to keep his promises to his voters. How then do we explain him pressuring the Fed to pursue irresponsible policies that are the opposite of his voters’ preferences? Surely among all his controversial policies there are others he’d abandon before publicly calling on the Fed to pursue inflationary policies.
Rhetoric with ulterior motives
Is this again a case of taking him too literally and not seriously enough? One of the most reliable indicators that you should not take President Trump’s rhetoric literally is when it is at its most infuriating. It is almost always to force the press to cover a story they’re avoiding or intended misdirection. Don’t give him that much credit? Please watch Bill Mahar’s monologue on his dinner with President Trumpif you have any doubt that President Trump’s rhetoric is almost if not wholly theater.
Consider the infamous line from his debate with Kamala Harris that “they’re eating dogs in Springfield.” The purpose of the line was not to convince anyone that it was true, but rather to force the press to cover what they otherwise wouldn’t, i.e. that the Biden Administration had settled 20,000 Haitian immigrants in a town of just 60,000 people.55 Or consider his brilliantly confusing misdirection during the Israel-Iran “12-Day War” (as he called it), where his tweets went from first threatening Iran to inviting Iran to negotiate to demanding “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER” to providing Iran with a face-saving exit to telling all parties to end the war in 12-hours.
Pressuring the Fed now is good politics
Thus, keeping in mind that we shouldn’t take his words literally, what might President Trump have to gain from publicly pressuring the Fed to cut rates now? Quite a bit, actually.
First, his rhetoric calls attention to the recent sharp fall in inflation that both his opponents and the media have tried to ignore. On a 3-month, annualized basis, every measure of US inflation, CPI and PCE, headline and core, has fallen below the Fed’s target of 2%. Politically, this is a big win for President Trump as he can claim (even if erroneously) that his policies brought down “Biden’s inflation” and that, contrary to the claims of his critics, tariffs are not causing inflation.
Second, if a recession does eventuate in the next year or so, he now has a ready scapegoat: the Fed should have cut interest rates when inflation fell below target.
Third, he clearly doesn’t like Jerome Powell and let’s admit it: Donald Trump is spiteful. By itself that isn’t enough reason to spend political capital bashing the Fed, but given the two compelling reasons above, it surely adds to his enjoyment.
But here’s the kicker: President Trump even admits that his public name calling and pressure on Chairman Powell is counterproductive, which adds to the evidence that its purpose is other than its stated intent. Note that another defining feature of President Trump’s rhetoric is that he never allows himself to be bound by it: something said today is forgotten or even denied tomorrow if no longer useful. Hence, bashing Jerome Powell today for not cutting interest rates in no way means that he intends to appoint a dove to take his place. Indeed, there are good reasons to think that he will not.
Appointing a hawk serves better in 2026
The first is that he almost certainly won’t reap any political benefit. Only two governorships expire during President Trump’s term, Adriana Kugler in January 2026 and Jerome Powell in January 2028, meaning that without other early resignations he will not be able to appoint a majority of the seven Governors until his final year in office, assuming (rightly given their recent behavior) that Governors Christopher Waller and Vice Chair Michelle Bowman are “his.” Further, Jerome Powell’s term as Federal Reserve Chair doesn’t end until May 2026. Thus, President Trump’s choice for chairman will have five short months – without a majority of Trump appointees on the Board – to get the full Committee (that adds five voting Bank presidents not appointed by the President) to cut rates before the 2026 midterm elections. Given monetary policy’s famously “long and variable lags” this is simply not enough time to have a meaningful impact on the economy ahead of the elections.
Second, President Trump’s actions are generally a stronger signal than his words, and the two leading candidates most associated with his active choices show no dovish inclinations. Throughout his campaign, President Trump allowed the media to assume that his pick for Fed chair would be former Governor Kevin Warsh, who has been stridently hawkish on Fed policy. Even as President Trump has escalated his rhetoric against the Fed, Mr. Warsh has maintained his hawkish stance without being censured or publicly discarded by Mr. Trump. Similarly, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who is running point on President Trump’s economic policies and seen as an ascendant contender for Fed chair, has not uttered a peep about lower interest rates.
Ironically, the sole basis for rumors of others’ contention – namely, “Two-Face” Governor Waller, “Catwoman” Vice Chair Bowman, NEC Chairman Kevin Hassett, and David Malpass – is that they have (rather pathetically) lately begun advocating lower rates to put themselves in contention.
Third and most important: non-inflationary policy is what President Trump promised his voters. Particularly given how close to the line he recently walked on his “no foreign wars” promise, with much gnashing of teeth from his base, he would be dangerously sacrificing political capital going into the midterm elections by appointing a dove as chair of the Federal Reserve. As noted, a dove would be unlikely to generate economic benefits in time for the election, but five months is ample time for both bond vigilantes to do damage to the economy and Federal finances, and for a political backlash to build among his MAGA base.
Don’t fight the narrative just yet
These are just my speculations as a Trump watcher and I must admit I don’t have firm convictions around them. But it strikes me that the consensus view that President Trump is committed to appointing a dove to the Federal Reserve is founded on far weaker reasoning, namely the President’s notoriously unreliable rhetoric and an erroneous assumption that a dovish Fed chair would benefit him politically. With ten months still before Chairman Powell’s term ends, the dovish-Fed narrative is likely to dominate, limiting options to trade my alternative hypothesis, but it should be a warning to avoid getting too long the consensus and to preserve optionality for a richening of long-dated swap spreads and rise in 2-year Treasury yields should Kevin Warsh or Secretary Bessent get the nod.
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