Trump Is Considering Firing Fed Chair Powell

Via Zero Hedge

If amid the barrage of negative news hitting the market this quarter there has been one outstanding item which would have sent it sharply (even) lower, that would be a flashing red headline – or a tweet from the president – announcing that Trump has fired Fed Chair Jerome Powell.

And while to many such an act would seem unthinkable, even from someone as unorthodox and unpredictable as Trump, it now appears that’s precisely the outcome the market will have to worry about next as Bloomberg reports that the president has discussed firing Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell “as his frustration with the central bank chief intensified following this week’s interest-rate increase and months of stock-market losses”, citing four people familiar with the matter.

While advisors in Trump’s inner circle have rightfully warned him that firing Powell would be a “disastrous move” for stock prices, and instead are “hoping that the president’s latest bout of anger will dissipate over the holidays”, the sources reveal that the president – who is facing the imminent departure of two of his closest advisors, chief of staff Kelly and secretary of defense Mattis – has talked privately about firing Powell many times in the past few days.

Still, even Trump likely realizes that any attempt to push out Powell would have a devastating effect on the one barometer of his presidency he holds dearest to his heart – the stock market – and not only that, but terminating the Fed chair would likely send a shockwave across global financial markets, resulting in a collapse of risk asset prices and undermining investor confidence in the central bank’s ability to guide the economy without political interference. Worse, it would come at the worst possible time, just as markets are in freefall in recent weeks, with the Nasdaq just entering a bear market and the S&P less than 3% away from being 20% down from its all time highs.

It is likely that any move against Powell would be met by considerable legalistic resistance as it is unclear how much legal authority the president has to fire Powell, as the Federal Reserve Act says governors may be “removed for cause by the President” and since the chairman is also a governor, that umbrella definition also extends to him. Even so, the rules around firing the leader are legally ambiguous according to Peter Conti-Brown of the University of Pennsylvania notes in his book on Fed independence.

Additionally, while the Fed is independent only on paper, and history is replete with examples of presidents influencing monetary policy in the past, most notably when LBJ literally attacked then Fed chairman William McChesney Martin, there has yet to be an instance of an acting Fed chair being fired by the president.

Such a move would represent an unprecedented challenge to the Fed’s independence. Though he was nominated by the president, Powell was thought to be insulated from Trump’s dissatisfaction by a tradition of respect for the independence of the central bank.

That separation of politics from monetary policy is supposed to instill confidence that Fed officials will do what’s right for the economy over the long term rather than bend to the short-term whims of a politician.

The reason behind Trump’s ire is simple: he sees the Fed’s rate hikes as the cause behind the market’s recent slump, and after explicitly “urging” the Fed not to hike rates last week, saying Powell was “being too aggressive, far too aggressive, actually far too aggressive” and telling Reuters the central bank “would be foolish” to proceed with a rate hike, he may well see Powell’s “not so dovish” rate hike as an open act of defiance – usually a career-ending move for anyone who ultimately is accountable to Trump.

The irony is that just over two years ago, Trump attacked Powell’s predecessor, Janet Yellen, for creating a stock market bubble with her dovish policies: in Sept 2016, Trump accused the the Fed of “keeping the rates artificially low so the economy doesn’t go down so that Obama can say that he did a good job. They’re keeping the rates artificially low so that Obama can go out and play golf in January and say that he did a good job. It’s a very false economy. We have a bad economy, everybody understands that but it’s a false economy.”

Two years later, when the same “false economy” belongs to Trump, the president has changed his tune, and his ideal Fed chair would be none other than Janet Yellen (whom Trump refused to reappoint for being “too short.”)

The even bigger irony is that Powell finds himself in a lose-lose situation: one one hand he can merely perpetuate the unsustainable asset bubble created by his predecessors Greenspan, Bernanke and Yellen whose inevitable bursting would have devastating consequences on the financial system (which, however, he can leave to his successor as both Bernanke and Yellen did), or he can bit the bullet and be the one responsible for at least attempting the renormalization of monetary policies, an even which inevitably lead to far greater pain for those who invested in said bubble.

Furthermore, when Trump signed up for the presidency he should have picked one of the two options: the fact that he did not and two years later decided to continue on the autopilot set previously by the Fed is precisely why it is Trump who will now have no choice but to be the fall guy for the mess prior administrations, and previous Fed chairs created.

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/fed%20bs%20trump%20fires%20fed.jpg?itok=5UF8SbHN

Trump’s public and private complaints about members of his administration have often been a first step toward their departures — including former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, his first Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and outgoing chief of staff John Kelly.

And while it’s not just Powell who is on the chopping block as some of Trump’s recent anger has also been directed at Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin for his part in persuading the president to select Powell to lead the Fed, the fact that Powell’s tenure is now in jeopardy and that the Fed Chair could be fired after even a mere sharp drop in the market – with an S&P500 bear market looming as a likely psychological catalyst – will lead to a self-fulfilling prophecy as traders will now sell merely on the fear of, and frontrunning the news that Trump has fired Powell precisely as a result of such selling.

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9 Comments
pyrrhus
pyrrhus
December 22, 2018 11:00 am

Not happening…and btw, Powell is doing the right thing, which should have been done years ago…But the right thing only seems to happen under Republican Presidents.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  pyrrhus
December 22, 2018 3:24 pm

The right thing would be to abolish the Fed entirely. That most certainly won’t be happening anytime soon. Republicans just allow the application of more bandaids than the democrats do.

Dennis Miller
Dennis Miller
December 22, 2018 11:07 am

Hi,

He doesn’t have to fire Powell. He needs to champion legislation to audit the Fed and make their dealing public. Firing Powell does not shed light on the Fed’s true intent and political activities.

A bill to audit the Fed would really be favored by the public and expose the crony political hacks in Washington even more.

Best regards,
Dennis Miller

musket
musket
  Dennis Miller
December 22, 2018 1:14 pm

Yes…..and begin Monday if you can……

NtroP
NtroP
  Dennis Miller
December 22, 2018 2:12 pm

Dennis,
I think you hit the nail on the head.
Audit them first, then the next logical step is to abolish the fuckers.

no one
no one
  Administrator
December 22, 2018 1:48 pm

And their mothers wear army boots…

Prof. Mandelbrot
Prof. Mandelbrot
December 22, 2018 11:49 am

Trump said it was a false economy back then because there was justification rates should have been going up in 2011. He was right. But the so called independent fed did nothing. They were politicized in favor of obummer. The rates would have been nearly normalized when trump took office allowing a real economy. They held back raising rates as a poision pill in case a republican beat hittlery. Now just when the mkt and economy are in need of the fed reducing rates to have a normalized fed and economy they are raising the rates to submarine trump, the mkts and the economy to allow the sjw snowflakes and vast daca votes to shoe in a demoncrat in 2020. Seems demoncrats play a longer game than the rinno republicans can fathom. They play under old archaic rules whilst dems make up a whole new game unknown to them. Funny how the fed can favor one party but be called “independent” and remain independent when a dem president leads them by the nose but when trump or a republican points out the feds funny math and asymmetrical econ tactics its suddenly politicized. Seems to only be politicized one direction. In favor of dems and against republicans. Trump needs to cut the wart off. Fire him let the mkts take the big hit and recover fast vs letting the mkt drop another 30% over 18 months possibly to an unrecoverable status leading to a decade of pain. Capitalism works. Price discovery must be real. Allow the crash and capitalist will come in and take business risks and the recoverry starts with private risk capital. Its has been historically accurate these move much faster than trying to avoid or lengthen/reduce the pain. Rip the bandaid off and the pain subsides much faster snowflakes.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
December 22, 2018 3:23 pm

Pass out rope and rickety stools to the entire Fed board. End the Fed!