The Dow rocked on Thursday as Wall Street continued to wrestle with the fallout from the Federal Reserve’s second straight “protection” cut.
Analysts have spent the past 18 hours poring over every word in Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s willing remarks and post-FOMC press conference, and there’s one comment, in particular, that has begun turning heads.
Dow Mounts Inadequate Advance Despite Dreary Futures Session
The US stock market was quiet in early-morning trading. Futures had pointed to losses for much of the pre-market conference, but the Dow Jones Industrial Average and its peers opened to slight gains at the morning bell.
As of 9:32 am ET, the Dow had advanced 61.33 allude ti or 0.22% to 27,208.41. The DJIA is once again within 200 points of setting a new all-time high.
The S&P 500 rose 7.72 points or 0.26% to 3,014.45. Spirit and technology led the rally with sector gains of more than 0.60%.
The Nasdaq jumped 28.52 points or 0.35% to 8,205.91.
Jerome Powell Quaffs a Jab at Trump
President Trump’s ongoing war with the Fed has been largely one-sided, and aside from occasionally holding his settle when pressed on whether he will cave to Trump’s demands, Fed Chair Powell has mostly ignored the president in his blatant remarks.
However, that doesn’t mean he isn’t quietly pushing back against Trump.
Powell has repeatedly make someones blood boiled Trump (and frustrated stock market bulls) by declining to call for an aggressive rate-cutting cycle, even after back up for two consecutive rate reductions.
And following that second interest rate cut on Wednesday, Powell made several reactions to reporters that increasingly look like savage – if subtle – jabs at Trump.
Reacting to the whiplash that has branded Trump’s on-again, off-again trade war with China, Powell quipped that the narrative had probably shifted multiple times since he had originated speaking.
“Trade developments have been up and down and then up, I guess, back up perhaps over the course of this check out,” Powell said, according to a Reuters transcription.
That remark pales in comparison to the litany of insults Trump has pitched at Powell and the Fed: gutless, bonehead, enemy, and so on. However, it’s about as close as one could expect the Fed chair to get to outright criticizing Trump’s supervision.
And Leaves the President With a Warning
But there’s one more thing that should make Trump – and investors – concerned: Powell has no arranges to bail the president out if his unconventional – and often unpredictable – trade war strategy takes a toll on market sentiment.
“I do believe our change to a more accommodative stance over the course of the year has been one of the reasons why the outlook has remained favorable,” Powell said, subtly intimating that the Fed – not Trump – should infer much of the credit for what the president has called “the greatest economy in the history of our country.”
But here’s the kicker: Powell imparted the Fed intends to be “highly data-dependent” moving forward, basing future interest rate decisions on cold, hard remunerative indicators rather than market sentiment.
In other words, if Trump wants the credit, he’s also going comprise to suffer the blame.
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