The Borneo Post

Trump once again criticizes Federal Reserve, rate hikes

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump once more broke with protocol Monday as he criticised the US Federal Reserve for raising interest rates and accused it of failing to support his economic policies.

And in an interview with Reuters, he declined to confirm his support for the central bank’s independen­ce, something that has the potential to worry financial markets.

That was a step further than Trump went just a month ago, when he also said he was “not thrilled” with the Fed for raising the key interest rate.

As the US economy has recovered, the Fed has raised the benchmark lending rate seven times since December 2015, twice this year under current chairman Jerome Powell, and it expected to hike twice more in 2018.

Powell in a radio interview in mid-July said he was not concerned about pressure on him to alter policy, saying “we don’t take political considerat­ions into account.”

He added at the time that “no one in the administra­tion has said anything to me that really gives me concern on this front.”

Trump nominated Powell to lead the Fed after declining to give a second term to Janet Yellen, someone he harshly criticised during the presidenti­al campaign in 2016, accusing her of keeping rates low to help his opponents.

He repeated his criticism of monetary policy under Powell’s leadership at a fundraiser on Friday, according to reports by the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg.

“I’m not thrilled with his raising of interest rates, no. I’m not thrilled,” Trump repeated in the interview with Reuters on Monday.

Asked if he believed in Fed independen­ce, Trump said: “I believe in the Fed doing what’s good for the country.”

Questionin­g Fed policy is normally off limits for US politician­s, since it could raise fears central bankers would fail to act to head off rising inflation. But Trump’s has not been a normal administra­tion.

Trump criticism of the Fed “attracted a lot of attention” but did not really move the stock or the bond markets, LBBW market strategist Karl Haeling told AFP.

“So far people don’t think it’s going to change the Fed’s policy, at least for its meeting in September.”

However, Trump’s criticism “has definitely been a driver” of currency markets, according to David Gilmore from Foreign Exchange Analytics.

But “I don’t think anybody thinks Powell will be influenced by that.”

The dollar index moved slightly lower after the Bloomberg and Wall Street Journal stories and accentuate­d its drop after Reuters’ story.

Powell explained the rationale behind Fed policy in June, when the last rate increase took effect. — AFP

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