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Trump Choosing New Fed Chair Before Christmas: Why Borrowing Costs May Shift
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) When U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CNBC there was a“very good chance” President Donald Trump would name the next Federal Reserve chair before Christmas, he was sending more than a scheduling update.
He was hinting that Trump wants his own person in charge of interest rates as soon as Jerome Powell's term ends in May. Trump has spent years attacking Powell for cutting rates too slowly and for allowing the Fed to loom too large over markets.
Now Bessent says five“very strong” finalists are in a second interview round, including figures seen as more comfortable with simpler, growth-first policy and less fond of the heavy-handed experiments of the past decade.
That matters because the Fed has already cut rates twice this year, bringing the federal funds range down to 3.75–4.00 percent. Investors are debating whether Powell 's Federal Open Market Committee will deliver one more small cut at the December meeting.
The odds move with every data release. Nothing about Bessent's comment forces Powell to act again, and the data still matters more than television soundbites. What the remark really does is shift expectations for 2026 and beyond.
Trump's Fed Pick Could Loosen Policy
If Trump installs a chair who shares his skepticism of technocratic overreach, the Fed could lean more consistently toward lower borrowing costs and a lighter footprint in markets and credit allocation.
That would please many businesses and households who feel crushed by the post-pandemic interest-rate shock. The message is also political.
Announcing the new chair before Christmas would underline that economic policy is being reset in Washington, away from the cautious style favored by many in the bureaucracy.
It signals that the White House sees growth, jobs and a strong U.S. asset base as the central mission for monetary policy, not ambitious social engineering through the back door.
For readers in Brazil and other emerging markets, this matters directly. A gentler Fed often means a weaker dollar, easier external financing and more breathing room for local central banks. But if the world starts to doubt the Fed's independence, the long-term result could be more volatility, not less.
He was hinting that Trump wants his own person in charge of interest rates as soon as Jerome Powell's term ends in May. Trump has spent years attacking Powell for cutting rates too slowly and for allowing the Fed to loom too large over markets.
Now Bessent says five“very strong” finalists are in a second interview round, including figures seen as more comfortable with simpler, growth-first policy and less fond of the heavy-handed experiments of the past decade.
That matters because the Fed has already cut rates twice this year, bringing the federal funds range down to 3.75–4.00 percent. Investors are debating whether Powell 's Federal Open Market Committee will deliver one more small cut at the December meeting.
The odds move with every data release. Nothing about Bessent's comment forces Powell to act again, and the data still matters more than television soundbites. What the remark really does is shift expectations for 2026 and beyond.
Trump's Fed Pick Could Loosen Policy
If Trump installs a chair who shares his skepticism of technocratic overreach, the Fed could lean more consistently toward lower borrowing costs and a lighter footprint in markets and credit allocation.
That would please many businesses and households who feel crushed by the post-pandemic interest-rate shock. The message is also political.
Announcing the new chair before Christmas would underline that economic policy is being reset in Washington, away from the cautious style favored by many in the bureaucracy.
It signals that the White House sees growth, jobs and a strong U.S. asset base as the central mission for monetary policy, not ambitious social engineering through the back door.
For readers in Brazil and other emerging markets, this matters directly. A gentler Fed often means a weaker dollar, easier external financing and more breathing room for local central banks. But if the world starts to doubt the Fed's independence, the long-term result could be more volatility, not less.
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