Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eggs were $4.49/dozen at Wegman’s this weekend.
They were $1.19/doz when Joe was president
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trump appointed Fed Reserve Chairman Powell in 2017. Who’s the major loser?
Powell did get things wrong numerous times. Whether Trump is correct in calling for lower Fed rates is an open question. Lower rates might spur domestic borrowing to replace overseas investments.
Presidents from both parties have called for lower interest rates for decades.
They didn't do so by openly bullying and threatening the Fed Chair on social media and on TV.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren criticized Powell. “Your record gives me grave concern,” the Massachusetts Democrat told Powell while he was testifying before the Senate Banking Committee. “Over and over, you have acted to make our banking system less safe, and that makes you a dangerous man to head up the Fed. And it’s why I will oppose your renomination.”
Also, Sen. Warren called for Powell to cut rates in Sept. 2024:
"The Fed chair has already said he's waited too late. He has already indicated that there were economic consequences of having held interest rates too high for too long. The data show us that inflation is down. He should have lowered these interest rates earlier," "He needs a bigger cut so that he shows that he finally gets it and that he is not making a deliberate effort to crash this economy," she continued. "It is time to lower the interest rate. I believe it should go down by 75 basis points. He needs to signal to the market that he finally gets it and that his job is to keep this economy steady," she continued.
Warren and Senate colleagues Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., and John Hickenlooper, D-Colo., also penned a letter to Powell on Monday, urging the aggressive rate cut, warning that delays in doing so "have threatened the economy and left the Fed behind the curve."
The economy in Sept 2024 is very different than it is today. Apples and oranges to make that argument.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trump appointed Fed Reserve Chairman Powell in 2017. Who’s the major loser?
Powell did get things wrong numerous times. Whether Trump is correct in calling for lower Fed rates is an open question. Lower rates might spur domestic borrowing to replace overseas investments.
Presidents from both parties have called for lower interest rates for decades.
They didn't do so by openly bullying and threatening the Fed Chair on social media and on TV.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren criticized Powell. “Your record gives me grave concern,” the Massachusetts Democrat told Powell while he was testifying before the Senate Banking Committee. “Over and over, you have acted to make our banking system less safe, and that makes you a dangerous man to head up the Fed. And it’s why I will oppose your renomination.”
Also, Sen. Warren called for Powell to cut rates in Sept. 2024:
"The Fed chair has already said he's waited too late. He has already indicated that there were economic consequences of having held interest rates too high for too long. The data show us that inflation is down. He should have lowered these interest rates earlier," "He needs a bigger cut so that he shows that he finally gets it and that he is not making a deliberate effort to crash this economy," she continued. "It is time to lower the interest rate. I believe it should go down by 75 basis points. He needs to signal to the market that he finally gets it and that his job is to keep this economy steady," she continued.
Warren and Senate colleagues Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., and John Hickenlooper, D-Colo., also penned a letter to Powell on Monday, urging the aggressive rate cut, warning that delays in doing so "have threatened the economy and left the Fed behind the curve."
That's because the Congress has oversight powers over the Fed. The POTUS does not have that power; POTUS can only appoint and fire (for cause) Fed Board members.
The Fed answers to the Congress, not the POTUS. Powell has to testify a few times per year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The tariffs would ordinarily be inflationary. Right now, they are not inflationary because consumer spending is stalled, waiting. Just like every other sector of the economy. All waiting. Waiting for Trump to grow up, for Congress to put their foot down. For WWII. Anything but this.
However, businesses and people cannot wait forever. Pretty soon, things will start melting down. Unless something changes.
If we keep going in this direction, I predict it will all come to a screeching crash by September when the supply chain cease to exist. Right now companies are using their stock pile that they over ordered in advance of this nightmare scenario, but that’s gonna run out. Shipping imports are already down.
September? What business gets 9 months of inventory? Car companies get antsy with 90 days and would prefer 30 days. Holding stock is an unnecessary expense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone bothered to explain to the Great Orange Blunder that this is not the pathway to that Nobel Prize he so covets?
He whines about the peace prize a lot, but since he seems to have given up on the peace process in Ukraine and Israel, it's not likely he will get the prize any time soon. It turns out that brokering peace is difficult, even for the world's "greatest deal-maker."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, we know Trump is clueless but is no one going to say anything??
The emperor is bu tt naked.
He’s also a fascist.
It does appear to be intentional sabotage of the county. A hostile takeover. How can it be stopped?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trump appointed Fed Reserve Chairman Powell in 2017. Who’s the major loser?
Powell did get things wrong numerous times. Whether Trump is correct in calling for lower Fed rates is an open question. Lower rates might spur domestic borrowing to replace overseas investments.
Presidents from both parties have called for lower interest rates for decades.
They didn't do so by openly bullying and threatening the Fed Chair on social media and on TV.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren criticized Powell. “Your record gives me grave concern,” the Massachusetts Democrat told Powell while he was testifying before the Senate Banking Committee. “Over and over, you have acted to make our banking system less safe, and that makes you a dangerous man to head up the Fed. And it’s why I will oppose your renomination.”
Also, Sen. Warren called for Powell to cut rates in Sept. 2024:
"The Fed chair has already said he's waited too late. He has already indicated that there were economic consequences of having held interest rates too high for too long. The data show us that inflation is down. He should have lowered these interest rates earlier," "He needs a bigger cut so that he shows that he finally gets it and that he is not making a deliberate effort to crash this economy," she continued. "It is time to lower the interest rate. I believe it should go down by 75 basis points. He needs to signal to the market that he finally gets it and that his job is to keep this economy steady," she continued.
Warren and Senate colleagues Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., and John Hickenlooper, D-Colo., also penned a letter to Powell on Monday, urging the aggressive rate cut, warning that delays in doing so "have threatened the economy and left the Fed behind the curve."
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone bothered to explain to the Great Orange Blunder that this is not the pathway to that Nobel Prize he so covets?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, we know Trump is clueless but is no one going to say anything??
The emperor is bu tt naked.
He’s also a fascist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trump appointed Fed Reserve Chairman Powell in 2017. Who’s the major loser?
Powell did get things wrong numerous times. Whether Trump is correct in calling for lower Fed rates is an open question. Lower rates might spur domestic borrowing to replace overseas investments.
Presidents from both parties have called for lower interest rates for decades.
They didn't do so by openly bullying and threatening the Fed Chair on social media and on TV.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren criticized Powell. “Your record gives me grave concern,” the Massachusetts Democrat told Powell while he was testifying before the Senate Banking Committee. “Over and over, you have acted to make our banking system less safe, and that makes you a dangerous man to head up the Fed. And it’s why I will oppose your renomination.”
Also, Sen. Warren called for Powell to cut rates in Sept. 2024:
"The Fed chair has already said he's waited too late. He has already indicated that there were economic consequences of having held interest rates too high for too long. The data show us that inflation is down. He should have lowered these interest rates earlier," "He needs a bigger cut so that he shows that he finally gets it and that he is not making a deliberate effort to crash this economy," she continued. "It is time to lower the interest rate. I believe it should go down by 75 basis points. He needs to signal to the market that he finally gets it and that his job is to keep this economy steady," she continued.
Warren and Senate colleagues Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., and John Hickenlooper, D-Colo., also penned a letter to Powell on Monday, urging the aggressive rate cut, warning that delays in doing so "have threatened the economy and left the Fed behind the curve."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trump appointed Fed Reserve Chairman Powell in 2017. Who’s the major loser?
Powell did get things wrong numerous times. Whether Trump is correct in calling for lower Fed rates is an open question. Lower rates might spur domestic borrowing to replace overseas investments.
Presidents from both parties have called for lower interest rates for decades.
They didn't do so by openly bullying and threatening the Fed Chair on social media and on TV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trump appointed Fed Reserve Chairman Powell in 2017. Who’s the major loser?
Powell did get things wrong numerous times. Whether Trump is correct in calling for lower Fed rates is an open question. Lower rates might spur domestic borrowing to replace overseas investments.
Presidents from both parties have called for lower interest rates for decades.