
Donald Trump criticises Fed Chair Jerome Powell again, says ‘I hope he quits'
'I hope he quits,' Donald Trump told reporters on the tarmac at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, adding, 'He should quit because he has been very bad for this country.'
U.S. President Donald Trump has the authority to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for cause if evidence supports that, White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett said on Sunday, adding that the Fed "has a lot to answer for" on renovation cost overruns at its Washington headquarters.
Hassett told ABC's "This Week" program that any decision by Trump to try to fire Powell over what the Trump administration calls a $700 million cost overrun "is going to depend a lot on the answers that we get to the questions that Russ Vought sent to the Fed." V
ought, the White House budget director, last week slammed Powell over an "ostentatious overhaul" of the Fed's buildings and answers to a series of questions.
Donald Trump has repeatedly said that Powell should resign because he has not lowered interest rates.
This is a developing story, more updates coming…
(With inputs from Reuters)

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Business Standard
19 minutes ago
- Business Standard
We have identified 8 issues: Cong MP Pramod Tiwari ahead of Monsoon Session
The Monsoon Session of the Indian Parliament is scheduled to begin on July 21 and conclude on August 21. During this session, the govt plans to push its legislative agenda, which includes new bills ANI Congress MP Pramod Tiwari on Sunday gave an inside in the INDIA alliance meeting held on July 19, and said that the INDIA Alliance has finalised its strategy ahead of Monsoon Session of Parliament, which centres around the Pahalgam terror attack, Operation Sindoor, and statements made by US President Donald Trump. MP Tiwari, while talking to ANI, said, "Yesterday, a detailed discussion on formulating strategy for the upcoming session regarding the crisis in which the nation has been pushed into by the BJP-NDA Government. It was a joint effort held in a conducive environment. I am happy to tell you that keeping national interest as supreme, it has been decided against the BJP's activities that are weakening the country, its democracy and economy." MP Tiwari said that the US President Trump's statement about the five fighter jets being shot down is disturbing and added, "It has been decided to raise issues, the most important being the Pahalgam attack. To date, the traces of terrorists have not been found. Regarding Operation Sindoor, US President Donald Trump stated for the 24th time that he secured the ceasefire. A shocking statement was made that five fighter jets were shot down. The defence attache also said the same. CDS too said the same. This disturbs us." He also mentioned that the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) happening in Bihar is killing democracy and said, "In Bihar, democracy is being murdered with SIR. The manner in which India has been isolated in its foreign policy is also an issue. Even now, heinous massacres are occurring - Israel is doing this in Gaza is also an issue. The issue is also about the oppression of SC, ST, women and minorities and crimes against them. We have especially identified 8 issues. We are confident that all 24 parties (in the INDIA Alliance) will support us; even the parties who are not a part of this will support us." The Monsoon Session of the Indian Parliament is scheduled to begin on July 21 and conclude on August 21. During the monsoon session of Parliament, the government plans to push its legislative agenda, which includes some new bills. The bills on the agenda of the government include Manipur Goods and Services Tax (Amendment) Bill of 2025, Taxation Laws (Amendment) Bill of 2025, Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill 2025, the Indian Institutes of Management (Amendment) bill 2025, the Geoheritage Sites and Geo-relics (Preservation and Maintenance) bill 2025, the Mines and Mines (Development and Regulation) Amendment Bill 2025, the National Sports Governance Bill 2025 and the National Anti-Doping (Amendment) Bill 2025. The government's agenda also includes the Readjustment of Representation of Scheduled Tribes in Assembly Constituencies of the State of Goa Bill, 2024, the Merchant Shipping Bill, 2024, the Indian Ports Bill, 2025, and the Income Tax Bill, 2025. The monsoon session of Parliament will continue till August 21.

Mint
19 minutes ago
- Mint
The US economy is regaining its swagger
When President Trump slapped tariffs on nations across the globe this spring, many economists feared higher prices and spending cuts would flatten the economy. Consumer sentiment collapsed. The S&P 500 stock index fell by 19% between February and April. The world held its breath and waited for the bottom to drop out. But that didn't happen. Now businesses and consumers are regaining their swagger, and evidence is mounting that those who held back are starting to splurge again. The stock market is reaching record highs. The University of Michigan's consumer sentiment index, which tumbled in April to its lowest reading in almost three years, has begun climbing again. Retail sales are up more than economists had forecast, and sky-high inflation hasn't materialized—at least not yet. 'We've been surprised again and again by consumers," said Jonathan Millar, senior U.S. economist at Barclays. In April, Millar predicted that the U.S. economy would likely go into recession this year. He now expects it to keep growing, albeit at a slow pace. As soon as Donald Trump was elected, Tyler Ahn decided she wasn't going to take any chances with the possibility of tariffs—or, worse, a broader economic collapse. The 46-year-old product manager stocked up, buying survival gear (flashlights, window-breaking devices and water-purification tablets), a mop bucket and an entire case of French rosé. Throughout the rest of the winter and early spring, Ahn sat tight, trying to spend as little as possible while attempting to follow Trump's evolving tariff threats. But recently, she gave up. 'I decided, well 'it is what it is; my money will buy what it will buy,'" said Ahn, who is based in Portland, Ore. 'What am I going to do? I've gotta live." She just got back from a two-week trip to Italy and France. Even with a weaker dollar, she said she spared no expense on hotels, meals and gelato. There are still signs of turbulence in the U.S. economy. Growth has been subdued. Inflation, while down from pandemic peaks, is still higher than the Federal Reserve would like. Manufacturing activity shrank for the fourth straight month in June, and immigration raids are damping spending among Hispanic consumers. Trump has repeatedly delayed the higher tariffs for imports from many countries he threatened in April, and the risk of fallout from steeper levies still looms. Earlier this month he threatened 30% tariffs on imports from the European Union and Mexico starting Aug. 1. Still, companies and consumers have brightened their outlook from earlier this year. JPMorgan Chase reported unexpectedly strong earnings last week and said the bank's economists are no longer expecting a recession. 'After the initial shock of tariff policy changes, everyone kind of went on hold," said Jeremy Barnum, the bank's chief financial officer. But 'at a certain moment, you just have to move on with your life. And it does feel like some of that is happening just because you can't delay forever." The bank said card-spending grew 7%. Elsewhere, Bank of America, Citigroup and Goldman Sachs reported rising profits, while United Airlines noted improved travel demand. A busy slate of earnings in the coming weeks will help create a fuller picture. In a July survey of 1,267 U.S. small-business owners by digital-marketing platform Constant Contact, 44% of respondents said demand for services and products is higher than they anticipated in January. A third were extremely optimistic that their business would be performing better in the next three months, and just under a third thought they would add more employees by then. There are signs of weakness in the labor market, where hiring by private employers has been sluggish. But the unemployment rate, 4.1% in June, remains low by historical standards because employers have also been reluctant to cut jobs. Spring is traditionally the busiest season for new-client enrollment at Command Education, a college admissions consulting firm for high-schoolers based in New York City. Not this year. Chief Executive Christopher Rim said the firm logged more sign-ups during the first week of July than in any full month since January. The reason: Wealthy clients who saw their stock portfolios shrink in March and April weren't about to drop $85,000 minimum on a year of services. 'The market was so iffy, they were like, 'let me just see how this plays out,'" Rim said. 'Now, they are ready." Christopher Rim said his college-admissions consulting firm was especially busy the first week of July. Two new employees joined Command's existing staff of 49 last week, and another new hire starts soon. Rim hopes to fill five additional full-time roles before summer's end. 'It's been insane," Rim said, adding that one of his salespeople canceled a planned weeklong vacation to catch up on intake calls. 'July is never like this." Consumers' spring pessimism reflected expectations for a tariff-fueled inflation surge. Those fears have since eased. Respondents in this month's University of Michigan's survey said they expect inflation of 4.4% in the coming year. In April, they expected 6.6% inflation. But even with delays on some of Trump's threats, he still has pushed overall effective tariff rates to the highest level in more than a century. The effect of tariffs could still be on the way. During the first Trump administration, tariff increases announced in 2018 didn't start showing up in capital spending until the second half of 2019, said Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan. 'Some of these things take a while," he said. Inflation ticked up slightly in June and prices of tariff-sensitive items such as toys, clothes and furniture rose, a sign that businesses are starting to pass the cost of the levies on to customers. Aaron Anderson, the owner of East Coast brunch-restaurant franchise Sunrise Social, said tariffs and high interest rates are still keeping him cautious about the prospect of shelling out on large projects like opening new locations. But instead of pulling back entirely, he has been investing more heavily in marketing, staffing and trying to improve customer experience at his existing locations. 'I'm still optimistic long-term," said Anderson. Christian Reed, who launched his Boston-based tools business as the Covid-19 pandemic took off, said this spring was even more chaotic. He paused new product manufacturing then due to tariff threats because his business, Reekon Tools, works with factories in China, Thailand and other affected countries. The company was 'in a holding pattern to see what was going to happen," Reed said. By early July, Reed said he had two revelations. Extreme upheaval in prices and consumer spending wasn't happening. And he was sick of waiting for certainty that seemed like it would never arrive. Christian Reed says he and his wife, who are expecting a second child this year, decided they are going to move ahead with buying a larger vehicle. His outlook as a consumer began to shift, too. He and his wife, who have a second child due in October, were holding off on upgrading their Mazda CX5 to a larger SUV that could more comfortably fit two car seats, plus their black lab and Italian greyhound. 'There was all the hyperbole that cars are going to go up 10,000%," Reed said. 'But it seems like none of that has really happened." They are planning to buy a Lexus or Volvo SUV next month. Write to Rachel Wolfe at and Konrad Putzier at


Economic Times
19 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Rupee to track dollar recovery, bond market focused on rate cut bets
Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel The Indian rupee will likely take cues from how far the dollar's nascent recovery extends this week, while bonds will move based on expectations of interest rate cuts by the local central rupee closed at 86.1475 on Friday, down 0.4% on the week. It is expected to hover between 85.80 and 86.70 in the near-term with a slight weakening bias, according to falling for five straight months, the dollar index is up 1.5% in July so far, as strong U.S. economic data and indications that tariffs have started pushing up prices lowered rate-cut expectations in the world's largest from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Tuesday will be in focus, in light of the persistent criticism he has faced from U.S. President Donald Trump for not lowering interest odds of a U.S. rate cut in September are around 53%, per CME's FedWatch ongoing trade negotiations with the U.S. will also be in focus alongside quarterly earnings reports from local companies, which have a bearing on foreign portfolio flows into equities. Forex advisory firm IFA Global recommended that importers cover near-term liabilities around 86, while suggesting exporters hedge around India's 10-year benchmark 6.33% 2035 bond yield, which settled last week at 6.3058%, is expected to move in a range of 6.28% to 6.33%. The yield could rise as New Delhi sells 300 billion rupees ($3.5 billion) of the benchmark on will be on the potential for rate cuts after India's retail inflation slipped to a more than six-year low in June. An expected further drop to a record low in July is prompting calls for another rate cut."With recent high frequency data disappointing and indicating the possibility of growth in India slowing down makes sense to be involved in local currency bonds also on the potential for more support from the RBI further down the line," said Giulia Pellegrini, lead portfolio manager emerging market debt at participants would also track whether the Reserve Bank of India turns more aggressive in withdrawing liquidity after drawing out 2 trillion rupees from the banking system on EVENTS: ** India July HSBC manufacturing, services and composite Flash PMI - July 24, Thursday (10:30 a.m. IST) U.S. ** June existing home sales - July 23, Wednesday (7:30 p.m. IST) ** Initial weekly jobless claims for week to July 14 - July 24, Thursday (6:00 p.m. IST)** July S&P Global manufacturing, services and composite Flash PMI - July 24, Thursday (7:15 p.m. IST)** June new home sales units - June 25, Wednesday (7:30 p.m. IST)** June durable goods - June 26, Thursday (7:30 p.m. IST)($1 = 86.1180 Indian rupees)