'Blew it!' Trump's Fed-bashing on Twitter escalates ahead of possible rate cut

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Over the last year, President Donald Trump has amped up his criticism of the Federal Reserve via his favorite megaphone: his Twitter account. His public berating of the central bank began only two months after his own nominee, Jerome Powell, became Fed chairman in February of 2018 and has only escalated since then.

Based on a Yahoo Finance analysis of tweets mined through the Trump Twitter archive as of July 28, Trump appears to have tweeted about the Fed or monetary policy decisions 39 times since nominating Jerome Powell to the head of the central bank (42 when counting the three repeat tweets that were deleted due to typos).

President Trump has fired off 39 tweets about the Fed since placing Jerome Powell at the head of the central bank. 31% of those tweets were posted during the Fed's blackout period, during which no Fed officials are permitted to make public statements. (Credit: David Foster / Yahoo Finance)
President Trump has fired off 39 tweets about the Fed since placing Jerome Powell at the head of the central bank. 31% of those tweets were posted during the Fed's blackout period, during which no Fed officials are permitted to make public statements. (Credit: David Foster / Yahoo Finance)

Heading into the Fed’s next policy-setting meeting on July 31, Trump has ramped up his central bank bashing to new levels, tweeting 20 times since the Fed’s last policy-setting meeting on June 19. For comparison, between the May 1 and June 19 meetings, Trump tweeted about the Fed only five times.

His most recent tweet: a Friday morning response to a new GDP print showing 2.1% growth for the second quarter.

Trump wants the Fed to stop unwinding its balance sheet and cut the benchmark interest rate.

The publicity of Trump’s stream of thought, aired out on Twitter, is a stark contrast to the tight protocol on communications at the Federal Reserve system. Whereas Trump can tweet whenever he would like (his latest Fed-related musing was at 11:24 p.m. EST), Fed speakers have limits on when they can and cannot make public remarks. For the eleven days leading into a Federal Open Market Committee meeting, Fed officials are not permitted to speak, a timeframe referred to as a “Fed blackout.”

About a third of Trump’s tweets were fired off during Fed blackout periods.

‘Don’t miss it again’

From “not acceptable!” to “they missed it (Big!)” Trump has frequently hit Powell and the Fed for tightening monetary policy.

For his part, Powell has reiterated that the Fed’s monetary policy decisions have been driven by fair assessments of economic conditions, responding to Trump’s criticism by saying the Fed is insulated from executive branch pressure and that the president does not have the authority to fire him.

But the Fed could end up delivering on a rate cut — the first in more than 10 years — as soon as Wednesday.