https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/12/fed-chair-jay-powell-sends-a-bold-message-to-trump-and-tanks-the-dow-by-1123-points/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: December 19, 2024 ~

Fed Chair Jerome Powell at Press Conference on November 2, 2022
Fed Chair Jerome Powell

If President-elect Donald Trump thought Fed Chair Jay Powell was going to
be taking a loyalty oath to him, Trump got a rude awakening yesterday.

The Fed cut interest rates by a quarter point yesterday but issued a
statement suggesting that rate-cutting would be far more subdued next year
than the market had expected.

In response, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1123 points, closing
near its lows of the day and marking its 10th consecutive day of losses.
The Dow gave up 2.58 percent of its value while the tech-heavy Nasdaq lost
3.56 percent.

The megabanks on Wall Street were among the big losers of the day. Morgan
Stanley dropped 5.25 percent; Goldman Sachs was down by 4.25 percent;
Citigroup gave up 4.22 percent; Bank of America lost 3.44 percent while
JPMorgan Chase shed 3.35 percent by the closing bell.

These five megabanks are the banks most heavily exposed to tens of
trillions of dollars in derivatives. What the Fed does with interest rates
has a major impact on their existing derivative trading positions. The
broad selloff in these names suggests these banks have some wrong-way bets
in their derivative books, or at least that is the market’s perception.

In his first term as President, Trump pressured Powell for lower interest
rates and was heavily focused on the stock markets’ performance – appearing
to see it as a gauge of his own performance as President. The Fed’s
suggestion that it will be stingy with more interest rate cuts next year is
likely to set up a showdown between Trump and Powell.

During Powell’s press conference yesterday, he also shot down any notion
that the Fed was going to be getting involved in Trump’s promise to his
crypto megadonors to create a Bitcoin Strategic Reserve. Powell stated:
“We’re not allowed to own bitcoin,” adding that “we are not looking for a
law change at the Fed.”

Those remarks sent Bitcoin into a sharp skid in late afternoon, from the
range of $105,000 to as low as $99,000 at one point. Bitcoin had recovered
to a $102,000 level as of 8:00 a.m. ET this morning.

At the Nashville Bitcoin Conference in July, Trump was a featured speaker
and told the crowd this:

“It will be the policy of my administration to keep 100 percent of all
Bitcoin the US government currently holds [seized from fraudulent actors]
or acquires in the future…as a core of the strategic national Bitcoin
stockpile.”

Adding to market jitters yesterday was the unelected tech billionaire Elon
Musk appearing to be muscling his way into the role of the legislative
branch of the federal government. In the early hours of the morning
yesterday, and continuing through much of the day, Musk Tweeted his
displeasure with the proposed Continuing Resolution (CR) to fund the
government through mid-March of next year. The CR had the support of
Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson and was expected to pass.

At 3:14 p.m. – in the midst of the stock market meltdown – Musk Tweeted:

“ ‘Shutting down’ the government (which doesn’t actually shut down critical
functions btw) is infinitely better than passing a horrible bill”

Musk does not appear to be conversant with the reality that credit rating
agencies like S&P, Moody’s and Fitch don’t take kindly to chaotic
governments and might decide to slash the credit rating of U.S. sovereign
debt. That would raise the cost to every American taxpayer to finance the
nation’s debt.

In 2011, S&P slashed the U.S. sovereign debt rating from AAA to AA+, citing
political standoffs between the two major political parties over the debt
ceiling.

On August 1 of last year, Fitch downgraded the U.S. Long-Term
Foreign-Currency Issuer Default Rating from AAA to AA+. Fitch specifically
cited “repeated debt limit standoffs and last-minute resolutions” in
explaining the downgrade.

By late afternoon, Trump and Vice President-elect JD Vance were siding with
Musk.

If there is no Continuing Resolution passed by Friday night, the government
will be forced to go into partial shutdown, which could include employee
layoffs.

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