• Home
  • Categories
  • News
  • Community
EN
EN
Home
CategoriesNewsGlossaryCommunityAbout Us
Contact Us
Social Media
Region
๐ŸŒInternational
Region
๐ŸŒInternational

Copyright ยฉ 2023-2026 Traderknows Ltd. All rights reserved.

Contact
Home
/
News
/
Trump's "maximum pressure" on the Federal Reserve reveals ulterior motives.

Trump's "maximum pressure" on the Federal Reserve reveals ulterior motives.

2025-07-08
Summary๏ผšA senior journalist revealed that Trump is pushing for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates to facilitate tax cuts and deficit financing, and scholars warn it may lead to inflation and economic risks.

930 ็‰นๆœ—ๆ™ฎ

The True Motives Behind Trump's Pressure for Interest Rate Cuts

Recently, the true motivations behind U.S. President Trump's ongoing pressure on the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates have been revealed. Greg Ip, a senior central bank reporter for The Wall Street Journal, pointed out that Trump hopes to reduce interest rates to complement the recently passed tax cut law and large-scale fiscal spending plans to alleviate financing cost pressures.

The report indicated that Trump is attempting to break the traditional economic logic of "borrowing drives up interest rates" by pressuring the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates, thereby maintaining the operation of his deficit spending plans. He emphasized that when a central bank prioritizes government financing needs over price and employment goals, it leads to a "fiscal dominance" model, historically associated with high inflation and economic stagnation.

Greg Ip warned that while this strategy might boost the stock market in the short term, it could lead to asset price bubbles and economic imbalances in the long run. He noted that the U.S. Treasury has already signaled a focus on issuing short-term government bonds to mitigate the risk of rising interest costs from longer-term debt, but if short-term rates increase, the U.S. fiscal burden will escalate rapidly.

Statements from the U.S. Treasury Secretary and Market Signals

On July 7th, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin publicly stated that the U.S. will achieve economic growth without triggering inflation and fully supports Trump's preferences for Federal Reserve chair nominations and monetary policy.

Mnuchin revealed that the Trump administration plans to focus on nominating a new Federal Reserve Chair in September and criticized the current Chair, Jerome Powell, for not cutting rates sooner, suggesting that more aggressive rate cuts might be needed to align with fiscal policy and economic growth objectives. He pointed out that the two-year Treasury yield is already significantly below the Fed's policy rate range (4.25%-4.5%), reflecting the market's belief that current rates are too high.

It is reported that the Federal Reserve will release the minutes of its latest monetary policy meeting on July 10th. With rate cuts paused for four consecutive meetings, the market is closely watching for potential policy shifts.

Labor Market and Interest Rate Cut Expectations

Recent data shows that the U.S. economy added 147,000 nonfarm jobs in June, exceeding market expectations of 106,000, with the unemployment rate unexpectedly dropping to 4.12%. This strong employment data provides the Federal Reserve with more reasons for "patient observation."

Nick Timiraos, a "Fed whisperer" journalist, pointed out that despite robust U.S. employment data, amidst current global trade tariff pressures, the Fed is more likely to observe its potential impact on inflation to avoid premature rate cuts while inflationary pressures persist.

Nancy Vanden Houten, chief economist at Oxford Economics, stated that although employment data surpassed expectations, there are still underlying structural weaknesses that need to be monitored for inflationary pressures from tariff policies.

Currently, interest rate swaps indicate that the market has reduced the likelihood of a rate cut at the July meeting to near zero, but the probability for a September rate cut remains at about 75%, with an expected total rate cut of 50 basis points throughout the year.

Market and Risks

Despite U.S. stocks reaching record highs under expectations of monetary easing, firms like Goldman Sachs note that the market expects the next Federal Reserve Chair to adopt more accommodative monetary policies, which is currently driving market sentiment. However, Greg Ip warns that such "fiscal-driven rate cuts" could easily lead to increased inflation and asset bubbles. If the economy faces unexpected shocks or policy mistakes, the U.S. could fall into a "triple threat" of high debt, high inflation, and slow growth.

For global investors, the trajectory of U.S. monetary policy will continue to influence global capital flows and risk asset prices, making the September Federal Reserve meeting a key time window for the next steps.

Business Cooperation Telegram Eng

Business Cooperation Skype ENG

Risk Warning and Disclaimer

The market carries risks, and investment should be cautious. This article does not constitute personal investment advice and has not taken into account individual users' specific investment goals, financial situations, or needs. Users should consider whether any opinions, viewpoints, or conclusions in this article are suitable for their particular circumstances. Investing based on this is at one's own responsibility.

The End
Previous
Next
Comments
0/1000
Written by
Created date:2025-07-08 03:25
Last Updated:2025-07-08 04:01
Independent Analysis: Manually researched and fact-checked by the TraderKnows Compliance Team, based on public regulatory records.
Wiki
Federal Reserve

The Federal Reserve, or the Federal Reserve System, is the central banking system of the United States, established on December 23, 1913. The Federal Reserve is composed of the Federal Reserve Board, 12 regional Federal Reserve Banks, and their respective branches, with the aim of providing a safer, more flexible, and stable monetary and financial system for the country.

Recent Post

Trump Invokes Defense Production Act with 850 Million USD for Coal Power to Meet AI Demand

06-05

NY Fed Index Shows High Supply Chain Pressures as Geopolitical Conflicts Raise Global Inflation Conโ€ฆ

06-05

Japan's Real Wages Rise for Fourth Consecutive Month, Fueling June BOJ Rate Hike Bets

06-05

China Flexible Employment Exceeds 300 Million as Blue-Collar Wage Growth Outpaces White-Collar forโ€ฆ

06-05

South Korean Stocks Post Steepest Weekly Drop Since March as Tech Valuations Reset

06-05

China Commercial Paper Rates Drop in Early June Amid Rising Bank Demand

06-05

UK House Prices Unexpectedly Fall in May as Geopolitical Tensions Push Up Borrowing Costs

06-05

Massive Intervention Fails to Save Yen as Short Positions Surge Near Historic Lows

06-05

AI Momentum Pauses as Broadcom Outlook Misses High Expectations; Markets Await Payrolls

06-05

SpaceX Launches 75B USD IPO Roadshow as Access Blocked in Mainland China and Hong Kong

06-05

Global Gold ETFs See $2 Billion Outflows in May as Capital Pivots to Tech Assets

06-05

Nikkei Drops Over 1% on Tech Sector Pullback While Real Wage Growth Provides Support

06-05

South Korea Lifts Mandatory Reporting for Crypto Transfers Over 10M Won

06-05

Amundi Says Asian AI Stocks Supported by Fundamentals as Fed Path Poses Key Risk

06-05

Taiwan Stocks Close 1.33% Lower on Broadcom Drop But Hold Key Technical Support

06-05

Risk Warning

TraderKnows is a financial media platform, with information displayed coming from public networks or uploaded by users. TraderKnows does not endorse any trading platform or variety. We bear no responsibility for any trading disputes or losses arising from the use of this information. Please be aware that displayed information may be delayed, and users should independently verify it to ensure its accuracy.