The Washington Post - 01.08.2019

(Axel Boer) #1

THURSDAY, AUGUST 1 , 2019. THE WASHINGTON POST EZ RE A


Former Fed leaders say that
Powell and his colleagues are
making good calls and that
Trump’s tweets and criticism are
not swaying anyone on the com-
mittee.
“I know Jay Powell very well,”
said former Fed chair Alan Green-
span. “The chance he would
buckle to what the president of
the United States said about pol-
icy above his knowledge of how it
works just seems inconceivable.”
[email protected]

Thomas Heath and Damian Paletta
contributed to this report.

nominated several candidates to
the Fed’s board who share his
low-rate views, although the Sen-
ate has not confirmed any of
them.
Some White House officials
had hoped that a series of interest
rate cuts by the Fed in the second
half of this year would lead to a
rebound in growth, boosting the
economy before next year’s No-
vember elections. But Powell’s
remarks Tuesday, combined with
cloudy outlooks for a number of
trade fights, could give business-
es pause before they resume in-
vestments.

political pressure. Scholars and
business leaders say Fed inde-
pendence is a bedrock foundation
for the economy and financial
markets, and there is some con-
cern the institution might be
caving to Trump’s demands.
“I think Powell did this to push
back on the White House and
signal the Fed’s independence,”
said Kristina Hooper, chief global
market strategist at Invesco. “I
believe that in Powell’s mind, a
short-term sell-off was a small
price to pay to assert the Fed’s
right to self-determination.”
The president has recently

The last time the Fed cut rates,
in December 2008, the U.S. econ-
omy was deep into a financial
crisis. The stock market had shed
a third of its value in a matter of
weeks, and unemployment was
over 7 percent. Today, the econo-
my is widely viewed as healthy,
with unemployment at a
half-century low, stocks at record
highs and inflation remaining
modest.
Fed leaders have characterized
this rate reduction as an “insur-
ance” cut to enhance the econo-
my’s strength in the face of grow-
ing problems abroad that could
spill over into the United States.
The Fed pointed to “soft” busi-
ness investment and declining
manufacturing output as areas of
particular concern.
In addition to the rate reduc-
tion, the Fed announced that it
would stop selling off its $3.8 tril-
lion in assets in August, two
months earlier than expected, in
another easing move. Trump ap-
plauded that action on Twitter.
Those assets are a legacy of the
financial crisis. In the aftermath
of the Great Recession, the Fed
bought a large amount of Treas-
ury bonds and mortgage-backed
securities to keep interest rates
low. The central bank started to
sell some of its holdings in recent
months because it thought the
extra stimulus was no longer nec-
essary. Now the Fed is putting
those sales on hold.
The Fed is supposed to make
the best decisions for the econo-
my’s long-term health and ignore

growth overseas and Trump’s
trade war.
“So far, financial markets clear-
ly believe the Fed hasn’t done
enough to alleviate concerns,”
said Guy LeBas, chief fixed-in-
come strategist at the Janney
financial firm.
Powell, while affirming the U.S.
economy is “healthy,” acknowl-
edged three problems on the hori-
zon: “weak global growth, trade
policy uncertainty and muted in-
flation.”
But the Fed chair’s attempts to
dance around questions about
whether the Fed would cut rates
again in September at times came
across as confused or ill at ease to
some.
“I lost count of how many
times he said ‘uncertain’ or he
‘didn’t know,’ which is very dis-
concerting,” said Diane Swonk,
chief economist at Grant Thorn-
ton.
Powell specifically mentioned
trouble in Europe and China as
reasons for Wednesday’s cut, and
while he didn’t mention Trump
by name, Powell gave some of his
most critical comments to date
about the economic impacts of
escalating trade tensions.
“Trade is unusual. We don’t,
you know, the thing is, there isn’t
a lot of experience in responding
to global trade tensions. So it is
something that we haven’t faced
before and that we are learning
by doing,” Powell said. “Trade
policy tensions nearly boiled over
in May and June but now appear
to have returned to a simmer.”

aggressive rate-cutting cycle
which would keep pace with Chi-
na, The European Union and
other countries around the world.
As usual, Powell let us down,”
Trump said on Twitter.
The strong reactions — from
the president and the markets —
underlined the pressure on Pow-
ell as he tries to navigate between
their demands for further reduc-
tions and the warnings from a
number of economists and Fed
leaders who do not think the
central bank should be cutting
rates to stimulate growth when
the economy looks solid, if not
strong.
Two out of 10 members of the
Fed’s rate-setting committee dis-
sented Wednesday, the largest
revolt since Powell took over as
chair. Boston Fed President Eric
Rosengren and Kansas City Fed
President Esther George said
rates should be left unchanged.
“I would not cut interest rates,”
said Steven Ricchiuto, chief U.S.
economist at Mizuho Securities
USA. “Cutting interest rates at
this juncture will do only one
thing: It will add to additional
financial market inflation, which
is the last thing in the world the
Fed should be doing.”
Trump has been critical of the
Fed since last summer, even
though he appointed the vast
majority of its board, including
Powell. Investors appear to agree
with Trump that the Fed should
do more to counteract slowing


FED FROM A


Powell laments trade tension


ANDREW HARRER/BLOOMBERG NEWS
Fed Chair Jerome H. Powell expressed frustration about the economic impacts of global trade disputes.
“It is something that we haven’t faced before and that we are learning by doing,” he said.

BY TOM HAMBURGER AND
ANU NARAYANSWAMY

The super PAC backing Presi-
dent Trump collected nearly
$9 million in the first half of the
year, with the vast majority of its
funds coming from just 10
wealthy donors who gave six-
and seven-figure sums, accord-
ing to information released by
the group Wednesday.
The huge contributions to
America First Action highlight
how Trump has reversed his
stance on big money since the


2016 campaign, when he at-
tacked his rivals for leaning on
super PACs financed by large
contributions.
This time, his campaign has
officially endorsed America
First Action as its “approved”
super PAC, which along with the
affiliated nonprofit America
First Policies raised $17.8 million
in the first half of 2019, the
organizations said.
Meanwhile, Priorities USA, a
Democratic effort focused on
defeating Trump in 2020, raised
$23.4 million through the first

half of the year, the group an-
nounced Monday.
Unlike candidate campaign
committees, which cannot ac-
cept donations of more than
$2,800 per donor per election,
super PACs can accept unlimited
sums, including from corpora-
tions. They are prohibited from
coordinating directly with cam-
paigns and political parties, but
in practice have increasingly
come to serve as extensions of
political candidates’ operations.
The biggest donor to America
First Action so far this year was

Los Angeles developer Geoffrey
Palmer, who gave $2 million.
Linda McMahon, who until
recently served as administrator
of the Small Business Adminis-
tration and now chairs the super
PAC, contributed $1 million.
McMahon said in a statement
that her goal is to “ensure we
have every dollar we need to
crush President Trump’s en-
emies.’’
Other million-dollar donors
to the pro-Trump super PAC this
year include the casino execu-
tive Cherna Moskowitz and Dick

and Liz Uihlein, who founded
the shipping supplies company
Uline.
In the last race, Trump repeat-
edly complained about the role
of big-money donors, suggesting
his opponents were beholden to
their largest contributors.
“They’re in total cahoots with
their [super] PACs, which
they’re not allowed to be,”
Trump told The Washington
Post in October 2015. “They’re all
in total cahoots. They put their
friends in there. One good thing
about me: I’m not.”

The America First operation
raised $10 million less in the
first half of this year than in the
previous six months, when the
super PAC and the nonprofit
together pulled in $27.7 million,
an official said. At the time, the
group was active in the 2018
midterm-election campaigns.
Officials said the pro-Trump
groups are on track this year to
exceed their fundraising goals,
noting contributions from more
than 11,000 donors.
[email protected]
[email protected]

Big donors lift pro-Trump groups’ intake to nearly $18 million in 6 months


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