Fed chair Powell is coming to terms with the fact that he needs to cut rates now, not later

Source Cryptopolitan

Jerome Powell is finally facing the problem head-on. After months of dodging the obvious, the Federal Reserve chair is being forced to accept that it’s time to cut interest rates—and fast.

The pressure is coming from every angle: Trump’s tariffs, sticky inflation, slowing growth, and rising recession risk. The Fed’s credibility is already bruised from calling past inflation spikes “transitory,” and Powell’s recent return to that word is not sitting well with economists or markets.

According to Bloomberg, the Fed’s dilemma right now is brutal. Either they hold rates high and risk pushing the U.S. into a downturn, or they cut too late and get steamrolled by a slowing economy that nobody saved. The decision can’t wait much longer, especially with new tariffs slamming both supply chains and consumer pockets.

Trump is forcing the Fed into a corner

Powell’s own words last month show he still thinks inflation from the tariffs won’t last. But if he’s wrong—again—the Fed’s already behind. The central bank is dissecting price data for anything tied to tariffs.

Officials are tracking which price increases are linked directly to taxed imports, how much gets passed down to consumers, how wide the impact is across sectors, and how people are adjusting their expectations for future inflation.

The Fed has historically looked past one-time direct shocks, but indirect effects are much stickier. St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem said a 10% increase in tariffs could push inflation up by as much as 1.2 percentage points, with more than half of that from indirect pressure.

“I would be wary of assuming that the impact of tariff increases on inflation will be entirely temporary, or that a full ‘look-through’ strategy will necessarily be appropriate,” Musalem said on March 26.

That model was based on tariffs before Trump’s latest announcement. But Bloomberg now puts the average U.S. tariff rate at around 22%, up from just 2.3% last year. That kind of jump nearly doubles the inflation threat laid out by Musalem’s staff.

The Fed is stuck between inflation and recession

The Fed hasn’t had to make a call like this since the 1980s. Back then, Paul Volcker chose to crush inflation, hiking rates so hard the economy slammed into a recession. That move still hangs over every inflation discussion at the Fed. Now Powell is in a similar spot—but this time it’s tariffs, not oil shocks, that are jamming up the economy.

The risk is clear: if growth slows but the Fed waits too long, they won’t be able to react in time. But Trump’s team isn’t backing off. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told CNBC on Thursday:

“It’s time to change the rules and make the rules be stacked fairly with the United States of America… We need to stop supporting the rest of the world and start supporting American workers.”

But that approach isn’t cost-free. Consumers are already feeling the hit. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said in an interview with Bloomberg that he’s watching not just pass-through costs, but also how consumers are reacting emotionally.

Expectations matter. People are bracing for more inflation, both short-term and long-term, and that mindset could make price hikes stick even harder.

Powell said Fed staff are modeling a wide range of tariff scenarios, including the assumption that other countries will hit back. But he admitted the picture’s still a mess. “Hard to say when that will be,” he said, referring to when the Fed might have a reliable forecast again.

Cryptopolitan Academy: Coming Soon - A New Way to Earn Passive Income with DeFi in 2025. Learn More

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Samsung Electronics Forecasts Stronger-Than-Expected Q3 Profit on AI Demand Samsung forecasts Q3 profit of 12.1 trillion won, boosted by strong AI chip demand.
Author  Mitrade
Oct 14, Tue
Samsung forecasts Q3 profit of 12.1 trillion won, boosted by strong AI chip demand.
placeholder
Dollar Gains as US-China Trade Tensions Ease The U.S. dollar remained steady on Tuesday following a shift in President Donald Trump’s harsh stance on tariffs against China.
Author  Mitrade
Oct 14, Tue
The U.S. dollar remained steady on Tuesday following a shift in President Donald Trump’s harsh stance on tariffs against China.
placeholder
Asian Stocks Mixed as Commodities Pause and Yen Draws AttentionAsian equity markets struggled to close the week on a weak note Friday, influenced by ongoing losses on Wall Street that extended into early Asian trading.
Author  Mitrade
Oct 10, Fri
Asian equity markets struggled to close the week on a weak note Friday, influenced by ongoing losses on Wall Street that extended into early Asian trading.
placeholder
Oil Prices Hold Steady Amid Gaza Ceasefire and US Sanctions Oil prices held steady in early Asian trading on Friday following the announcement of a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.
Author  Mitrade
Oct 10, Fri
Oil prices held steady in early Asian trading on Friday following the announcement of a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.
placeholder
Bitcoin drops below $110K ahead of $22B options expiry; altcoins tumbleBitcoin fell below the $110,000 mark on Friday, heading for a steep weekly loss as nearly $22 billion in cryptocurrency options were set to expire. The drop also comes as traders await key U.S. inflation data that could influence the Federal Reserve’s policy outlook.
Author  Mitrade
Sept 26, Fri
Bitcoin fell below the $110,000 mark on Friday, heading for a steep weekly loss as nearly $22 billion in cryptocurrency options were set to expire. The drop also comes as traders await key U.S. inflation data that could influence the Federal Reserve’s policy outlook.
goTop
quote