Fed, Trump and Powell
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The central bank remains cautious, even as calls for rate cuts grow louder from the White House and other policymakers.
WASHINGTON, July 9 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday called on the Federal Reserve to lower the federal benchmark interest rate by at least 3 percentage points, renewing his call for the U.S. central bank to lower rates to help reduce the cost to service the nation's debt.
As he sought to recapture the White House in 2024, Donald Trump promised to "put a temporary cap on credit card interest rates at 10%." During his presidency, bipartisan lawmakers have introduced bills to cap credit card interest rates, but they've failed to advance.
U.S. President Donald Trump has intensified his tariff rhetoric this week, but financial markets aren't convinced, likely expecting the President to back down and eventually reach a compromise with trading partners.
Global stocks advanced on Thursday, underpinned by optimism around artificial intelligence and the prospect of upcoming interest rate cuts, while investors kept a cautious eye on U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff actions and their impact on global trade.
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Cryptopolitan on MSNTrump demands historic rate cut as inflation threat loomsThe US stock market just blew past every record in history, as the capitalization-to-GDP ratio hit 208% this week, jumping nearly 43 percentage points since April. That crushes the previous high of 206% from February and more than doubles the ratio from nine years ago.
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CNET on MSNMortgage Rates Likely to Creep Up as Trump Reignites Trade War: Today's Rates, July 8, 2025Any drop in mortgage rates is good news for homebuyers, but rates still remain high compared to a few years ago.
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Straight Arrow News on MSNTrump tariffs or Powell policy? Who's to blame for high rates: Bias BreakdownPresident Donald Trump and Fed Chair Jerome Powell are clashing over interest rate cuts, with both sides of the media taking different sides.