
Trump visits US Federal Reserve HQ amid feud with Chairman Powell
Thursday's rare presidential visit to the Fed is happening less than a week before the central bank's 19 policymakers gather for a two-day rate-setting meeting, where they are widely expected to leave the US central bank's benchmark interest rate in the 4.25-4.50 percent range.
Trump has repeatedly demanded that the Fed lower rates by 3 percentage points and has frequently raised the possibility of firing Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, though the president has said he does not intend to do so.
On Tuesday, Trump called the Fed chief a 'numbskull'.
On Thursday, Trump publicly scorned Powell for the cost of an extensive building renovation as the two officials began a tour of the unfinished project.
Trump said the project cost $3.1bn, much higher than the Fed's $2.5bn figure, while Powell, standing next to him, silently shook his head.
'This came from us?' Powell said, before he figured out that Trump was including the renovation of the Martin Building, which was finished five years ago.
'Do you expect any more additional cost overruns?' Trump asked.
'Don't expect them,' Powell said.
Trump said in his career as a real estate developer, he would fire someone for cost overruns. The president joked that he would back off Powell if he lowered interest rates.
'I'd love him to lower interest rates,' Trump said, as Powell stood by, his face expressionless.
Powell typically spends the Thursday afternoon before a rate-setting meeting doing back-to-back calls with Fed bank presidents as part of his preparations for the session.
Elevated by Trump to the top Fed job in 2018, and then reappointed by former President Joe Biden four years later, Powell last met with Trump in March when the Republican president summoned him to the White House to press him to lower rates.
The visit takes place as Trump battles to deflect attention from a political crisis over his administration's refusal to release files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, reversing a campaign promise. Epstein died in 2019.
White House officials have ramped up Trump's pressure campaign on Powell in recent weeks, accusing the Fed of mismanaging the renovation and suggesting poor oversight and potential fraud.
White House budget director Russell Vought has pegged the cost overrun at '$700m and counting', and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called for an extensive review of the Fed's non-monetary policy operations, citing operating losses at the central bank as a reason to question its spending on the renovation.
Those losses stem from the mechanics of managing the Fed's policy rate to fight inflation, which include paying banks to park cash at the central bank. The Fed reported a comprehensive net loss of $114.6bn in 2023 and $77.5bn in 2024, a reversal from years of big profits it turned over to the Treasury when interest rates – and inflation – were low.
Renovations in the spotlight
The Fed, in letters to Vought and lawmakers, backed up by documents posted on its website, says the project – the first full rehab of its two buildings in Washington since they were built nearly a century ago – ran into unexpected challenges, including toxic materials abatement and higher-than-estimated materials and labour costs.
Ahead of Trump's visit, Fed staff escorted a small group of reporters around the construction sites. They wove around cement mixers and construction machines, and spoke over the sound of drills, banging and saws. Fed staff pointed out security features, including blast-resistant windows, that they said were a significant driver of costs, in addition to tariffs and escalations in material and labour costs.
The renovation project started in mid-2022 and is on track to be completed by 2027, with the move-in planned for March 2028. A visit to the roof of the Eccles Building – a point of particular scrutiny by White House critics that the renovations were ostentatious – revealed an impressive view of the Lincoln Memorial and the National Mall, the pool report said.
Staff explained that rooftop seating, although inexpensive, had been removed because of the appearance of it being an amenity and was one of only two deviations from the original plan. The other was the scrapping of a couple of planned fountains.
Senate Banking Committee Chair Tim Scott, a Republican who sent Powell a letter on Wednesday asking a series of questions about the cost and other details of the renovation, as well as Powell's own statements about it, is part of the visit as well.
Market reaction to Trump's visit was subdued. The yield on benchmark 10-year Treasury bonds ticked higher after data showed new jobless claims dropped in the most recent week, signalling a stable labour market not in need of support from a Fed rate cut. Stocks on Wall Street were mixed.
Trump's criticism of Powell and flirtation with firing him have previously upset financial markets and threatened a key underpinning of the global financial system: that central banks are independent and free from political meddling.
His visit contrasts with a handful of other documented presidential visits to the Fed. Then-President Franklin Delano Roosevelt visited the central bank in 1937 to dedicate the newly-built headquarters, which is one of the two Fed buildings now being renovated. Most recently, former President George W Bush went to the Fed in 2006 to attend the swearing-in of Ben Bernanke as Fed chief.
Central bank independence critical
'I think it's important that he send a signal that he really isn't happy with how things are going at the Fed,' said Senator Cynthia Lummis, a Republican member of the Senate Banking Committee. She said the visit was a 'good decision' by Trump.
Senator Mike Rounds, another Republican who sits on the Senate Banking Committee, said on Thursday he also saw no problem with Trump's visit, though he added that Powell's independence as Fed chief is 'critical for the markets. I think he's done a good job of that'.
'I think the more information the president can glean from this, probably the better off we are in terms of resolving any issues that are outstanding,' Rounds said, noting that Powell had indicated 'that they have had a significant amount of money, just in terms of foundation work and so forth, that was not anticipated to begin with'.
Former Fed chiefs Janet Yellen and Bernanke this week wrote an opinion piece in The New York Times warning that the public's belief that the US central bank is willing to make hard decisions based on data and independent of politics 'is an important national asset. It is hard to acquire and easy to lose'.
Economic experts widely agree.
'As we've seen through the disinflation process that has been taking place over the last few years, the credibility of central banks around the world has been instrumental in anchoring inflation expectations and in bringing down inflation across many countries in the world,' International Monetary Fund spokesperson Julie Kozack said on Thursday.
'And it is also important that independence, of course, must coexist with clear accountability to the public.

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