Grant Cardone Says Jerome Powell Intentionally 'Set Middle Class Back A Decade' And Froze the Housing Market — 'Tell Me I'm Wrong'
When Grant Cardone lights up social media, he doesn't bury the lead.
"Jerome Powell has set the middle class back a decade. Tell me I'm wrong...," he wrote in a fiery X post last week, sharing a clip from his July 1 appearance on Fox News. The caption was blunt, the tone unmistakable — and the message? The Federal Reserve chair, in Cardone's words, is the reason American families are stuck, broke, and locked out of the booming economy.
In the Fox News interview, Cardone — a real estate investor and entrepreneur — said Powell "actually want[ed] to damage, as he promised a year ago, the middle class," referencing the Fed chair's past comments about raising rates to fight inflation, even if it caused economic pain.
Don't Miss:
Warren Buffett once said, "If you don't find a way to make money while you sleep, you will work until you die." Here's , starting today.
$100k+ in investable assets? – no cost, no obligation.
"He is either stupid — which I don't think is the case — or he's unpatriotic," Cardone said. "Everywhere Jerome Powell is involved, prices are still up. Mortgages are too expensive."
Cardone argued that the Fed has never truly controlled inflation and that Trump-era policies had more to do with the recent price improvements than anything Powell has done. "President [Donald] Trump has had more to do with bringing inflation down in this country," he said. "The tariffs, taxes, regulation — inflation has come down, including oil production."
Cardone called the housing market the one piece of the economy that hasn't budged. "The only part of our economy that is frozen is housing," he said. "That's on Jerome Powell. He literally set the middle class back a decade."
Trending: It's no wonder Jeff Bezos holds over $250 million in art —
A few days later, Cardone echoed and expanded those comments on Facebook, saying Powell has "done more harm to American housing than anyone in history," and that "the housing market has FROZEN 12 trillion dollars of Americans' net worth."
"Trapped people in their homes," he added, "who can't access their equity to invest because of Powell's damage."
Cardone claimed Trump's policies — including tariff negotiations, tax reform, and oil production — helped bring inflation down, while Powell and the Fed stalled progress. "Lower prices show up everywhere except in housing," he wrote, "where Jerome Powell and friends stand in the way of a Donald Trump economy."
Then came the sharper speculation: "Powell is either stupid or he is unpatriotic, being controlled like a puppet by those who want to circumvent a Donald Trump America."According to Cardone, there's a clear fix: Powell steps down. "The moment Jerome Powell is gone," he said, "this economy will go into a Golden Era."
Realtor.com released its June report this week, and while the housing market isn't dead — it's definitely stuck in second gear. Active listings jumped nearly 29% year-over-year, passing the one million mark for a second straight month. Still, total inventory remains nearly 13% below pre-pandemic levels.
Pending sales dipped 1.6%, homes are sitting on the market longer — 53 days on average — and more than 1 in 5 sellers cut their asking price, the highest June rate since at least 2016. Prices haven't skyrocketed, but they're not coming down much either. Between high rates, slow sales, and hesitant buyers, the slowdown isn't just visible — it's measurable.
Love him or hate him, Cardone's not shy about where he thinks blame — and recovery — begins.
Read Next: Over the last five years, the price of gold has increased by approximately 83% — Investors like Bill O'Reilly and Rudy Giuliani are .
Image: Shutterstock
This article Grant Cardone Says Jerome Powell Intentionally 'Set Middle Class Back A Decade' And Froze the Housing Market — 'Tell Me I'm Wrong' originally appeared on Benzinga.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Big Tech earnings, Powell remarks, housing data: What to Watch
Market Domination Overtime host Josh Lipton goes over the top stories for investors to watch next week. Plenty of earnings are on deck next week, including from Verizon (VZ) Monday morning, Coca-Cola (KO) and Lockheed Martin (LMT) Tuesday morning, Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) and Tesla (TSLA) Wednesday afternoon, and Intel (INTC) and Deckers (DECK) Thursday afternoon. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell will deliver the opening remarks at a banking conference on Tuesday morning. New home sales data for June will be out on Thursday, with economists expecting an increase to 650,000 from May's 623,000. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Market Domination Overtime here. Time out what to watch starting off on that earnings front, a massive spread of earnings coming up including Coca-Cola, General Motors, Google parent company Alphabet and Tesla. Tesla announced results for the second quarter on Wednesday and expecting Elon Musk company to meet estimates for Q2. That's driven by stronger sales of the updated Model Y but the recent rollback of EV tax credits under President Trump's big beautiful bill, that could pose challenges for Tesla going forward. Also taking a look at the Federal Reserve, we're going to be getting some commentary on Tuesday from Fed chair Jerome Powell. Powell's going to be making remarks at a banking conference in the morning. This coming against the backdrop of continued pressure we know from President Trump to cut interest rates. Chicago Fed President Austin Goolsby telling Yahoo Finance on Friday that Fed independence from political interference is absolutely critical. And moving over to housing, fresh housing data coming in on Thursday with new home sales. Cons forecast that number to rise to 650,000, signaling a stronger demand for new homes and suggesting that buyers are feeling more confident about that housing market. Related Videos Abrahimzadeh: Believe in Elon's Ability Deepwater's Munster Sees Three-Year Bull Run in Tech Fed's Waller on Labor Market, Rate Cuts, Inflation, Fed Chair ABB CEO Morten Wierod on Data Centers, Automation Demand Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
First National Bank Alaska named one of top banks in the nation by Bank Director magazine
ANCHORAGE, Alaska, July 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Bank Director, a leading resource for the financial industry, named First National (OTCQX:FBAK) as the tenth best bank in the United States on its Top 25 Banks list and the third best bank on its Top Banks with Less than $5 Billion in Total Assets list. Bank Director uses four metrics to assess performance: return on equity, return on assets, asset quality and capital adequacy. 'I'm especially pleased Bank Director recognized the high quality of the bank's loans, maintained through our philosophy that all loans must not only make sense for the bank, but also be beneficial for the borrower,' said Betsy Lawer, First National Chair and CEO/President. 'These accolades are a powerful testament to the leadership, vision, and dedication of First National's Board of Directors and executive management team, as well as the 621 employees who bring that vision to life every day.' Alaska's community bank since 1922, First National Bank Alaska proudly meets the financial needs of Alaskans with ATMs and 28 locations in 19 communities throughout the state, and by providing banking services to meet their needs across the nation and around the world. In 2025, Alaska Business readers voted First National 'Best of Alaska Business' in the Best Place to Work category for the 10th year in a row, Best Bank/Credit Union for the fifth time, and Best Customer Service for the second year in a row. That year, Forbes also selected First National as the sixth best bank on their America's Best Banks list and one of the top two Banks in the State, and Newsweek recognized the bank as one of the nation's Best Regional Banks and Credit Unions. The bank was also voted 'Best of Alaska' in 2024 in the Anchorage Daily News awards, ranking as one of the top three in the Bank/Financial category for the sixth year in a row. American Banker again recognized First National as a 'Best Bank to Work For' in 2024, for the seventh consecutive year. For more than a century, the bank has been committed to supporting the communities it serves. In 2024, for the eighth consecutive reporting period, over a span of twenty-four years, First National received an Outstanding Community Reinvestment Act performance rating from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. First National Bank Alaska is a Member FDIC, Equal Housing Lender, and recognized as a Minority Depository Institution by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, as it is majority-owned by women. Contact:Corporate Communications907-777-3409
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
US Rep. Hakeem Jeffries holds ‘constructive' meeting with NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani
NEW YORK — Rep. Hakeem Jeffries Friday held what he called a 'constructive' meeting with Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, but the House minority leader isn't endorsing Mamdani just yet. After the hourlong sit down at an East New York office space, the pair agreed to meet again soon with members of the city's congressional delegation and community leaders. 'The meeting… was constructive, candid and community-centered, with a focus on affordability,' said Justin Chermol, a spokesman for Jeffries. The two men also discussed antisemitism, crime, gentrification and the Democratic effort to win back Congress in the 2026 midterms, Chermol said. Mamdani's campaign said the Queens assemblyman was 'pleased to meet' Jeffries. Jeffries didn't make an endorsement in last month's Democratic primary in which Mamdani romped to victory over ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo and a field of other candidates. The top Democrat in the House has stayed on the fence since Mamdani's win, even as other prominent Democrats who backed Cuomo have gotten in line behind the party's standard bearer. Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., has taken a similar noncommittal stance and has said he plans to meet with Mamdani soon in New York. Mamdani will run in the November general election against Republican Curtis Sliwa, with incumbent Eric Adams and Cuomo running as independents. The charismatic City Hall candidate drew rave reviews from Democratic members of Congress after a whirlwind visit to Washington, D.C. on Thursday organized by his ally, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. He also met with progressive Sen. Bernie Sanders, who praised him as an important new voice in the Democratic Party. Despite the groundswell of support for Mamdani in the city, some moderate Democratic leaders worry Republicans could use him as a poster child for the party's leftward drift.