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This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.
For most traders and investors, the FOMC, or Fed announcement is an event that triggers excitement and apprehension, as traders scramble to interpret Fed statements, often jolting the market as the news is released.
But now there is evidence that with President Trump's persistent tweeting, bashing the Fed and its Chairman Jerome Powell, investors could be putting less stock in the announcements, going so far as to even view the Fed, an autonomous entity, as having little independent power from the executive branch.
Back on April 18, the president bashed the Fed's approach to monetary policy, which he believed was driving up the dollar and making the U.S. less competitive globally, where zero interest rates prevail. He has called Chairman Jerome Powell “clueless” and Fed officials collectively “boneheads.”
..Spread is way too much as other countries say THANK YOU to clueless Jay Powell and the Federal Reserve. Germany, and many others, are playing the game! CRAZY INVERTED YIELD CURVE! We should easily be reaping big Rewards & Gains, but the Fed is holding us back. We will Win!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 14, 2019
Last week the U.S. central bank cut the overnight rate by 25 basis points to a range of 1.75% to 2%. This is the second time this year the Fed has lowered rates, following a 25 basis point cut in July, which tanked the market, and was accompanied by an explosion in volatility and investor distress.
No Further Cuts This Year?
However, the Fed’s rate outlook for the remainder of the year indicated no further cuts. The Fed was also divided in its decision to lower rates, with three officials dissenting, the most dissents for a Fed decision since December 2014.
Much like his effect on markets when tweeting about the trade war, experts believe that the president could be affecting the market's perception of the Federal Reserve as well.
“Overall, we find strong evidence that the consistent pressure applied by President Trump to pursue more expansionary monetary policy is manifested in the market expectations of a lower target rate, forecasting a steady erosion in central bank independence over the course of his presidency,” said the paper, authored by economists Francesco Bianchi of Duke University and Howard Kung and Thilo Kind at the London Business School.
“Our findings that market participants do not perceive the Federal Reserve as independent from the executive branch has indirect, but important, consequences for the actual autonomy of the central bank,” they added.