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Trump again attacks Fed chair, says Powell 'hurting' housing industry

Trump again attacks Fed chair, says Powell 'hurting' housing industry

Korea Herald16 hours ago
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- President Donald Trump said Tuesday that Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is "hurting" the housing industry "very badly" and repeated his call for a big cut to US interest rates.
"Could somebody please inform Jerome "Too Late" Powell that he is hurting the Housing Industry, very badly? People can't get a Mortgage because of him. There is no Inflation, and every sign is pointing to a major Rate Cut," Trump wrote on Truth Social.
Inflation is well off the highs seen during the pandemic, but some recent data has given a mixed picture and inflation continues to track above the Fed's 2 percent target range.
Trump's latest salvo against Powell comes ahead of the Fed chair's Friday speech at the annual Jackson Hole central banking symposium, where investors will cleave to his every word for hints on his economic outlook and the likelihood of a coming reduction to short-term borrowing costs.
The Fed's next policy meeting will be held on Sept. 16-17.
Investors and economists are betting the Fed will cut rates by a quarter of a percentage point next month with perhaps another reduction of similar size to come later in the year, far less than the several percentage points that Trump has called for.
Trump's Treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, has promoted the idea of a half-point rate cut in September.
The US central bank cut its policy rate half a percentage point last September, just before the presidential election, and trimmed it another half of a percentage point in the two months immediately following Trump's electoral victory, but has held it steady in the 4.25 percent-4.5 percent range for all of this year. Fed policymakers have worried that Trump's tariffs could reignite inflation and also felt the labor market was strong enough not to require a boost from lower borrowing costs.
The Consumer Price Index rose 0.2 percent in July, with the 12-month rate through July at 2.7 percent, unchanged from June. Core CPI, which strips out the volatile food and energy components, increased 3.1 percent year-over-year in July. Based in part on that data, economists estimated the core Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index rose 0.3 percent in July.
That would raise the year-on-year increase to 3 percent in July. The PCE is a key measure tracked by the Fed against its own 2 percent inflation target.
And despite a moderate rise in overall consumer prices in July, producer and import prices jumped, a suggestion that higher consumer prices could be coming as sellers pass higher costs onto households. The inflation picture comes amid a picture of a possible cooling in the labor market, with declines in monthly job gains, although the unemployment rate, at 4.2 percent, remains low by historical standards.
Trump's online attacks on the Fed and Powell more typically focus on the cost that higher interest rates mean for US government borrowing. High mortgage rates are a key pain point for potential homebuyers who are also facing high and rising home prices due to a dearth of housing supply.
Mortgage rates can be loosely tied to the Fed's overnight benchmark rate but more closely track the yield on the 10-year Treasury note, which typically rises and falls based on investors' expectations for economic growth and inflation. A Fed rate cut does not always mean lower long-term rates -- indeed after the Fed cut rates last September, mortgage rates -- which had been on the decline -- rose sharply.
In recent weeks the most popular rate -- the 30-year fixed mortgage rate -- has drifted downward but -- at around 6.7 percent most recently -- is still much higher than it had been before inflation took off after the pandemic shock and the Fed began its rate-hike campaign in 2022.
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US senator says Congress to review shipbuilding reforms after Lee-Trump summit
US senator says Congress to review shipbuilding reforms after Lee-Trump summit

Korea Herald

time9 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

US senator says Congress to review shipbuilding reforms after Lee-Trump summit

A US senator said Wednesday that Congress will review what legislative reforms may be needed to facilitate shipbuilding cooperation with South Korea, based on the outcome of next week's summit between President Lee Jae Myung and US President Donald Trump. Sen. Andy Kim (D-NJ) made the remarks during a press availability in Seoul, days before Lee and Trump are set to hold their first summit in Washington on Monday (US time), following a recent tariff agreement between the two countries. "There might be some reforms that can make it more efficient, speed the process, and we'll look at that appropriately," Kim said when asked about US shipbuilding regulations prohibiting foreign involvement. "I cannot move forward until I have a sense of what comes out from the summit next week. So we'll see how that's structured and how the investment is laid out, and then we'll move with the appropriate level of urgency," he said. With the tariff deal, South Korea has proposed large-scale shipbuilding cooperation projects, dubbed "Make American Shipbuilding Great Again (MASGA)," to held restore the sluggish US shipbuilding industry, including building new shipyards in the United States and partnerships on maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) projects. However, concerns have been raised about how quickly the shipbuilding projects can move forward, as US laws, such as the Jones Act and the Byrnes-Tollefson Amendment, remain as a legal barrier restricting foreign operations in commercial shipping and military shipbuilding. "If there are proposals needed for reforms that make sense to both of our countries, I think it could move fast," Kim said. Kim also addressed the need for the US to be clear about its goals in shipbuilding cooperation with South Korea, such as the number and type of ships it needs to build, saying that any legislative support would start from there. As a New Jersey resident who lives about 15 minutes away from the Philly Shipyard, run by South Korea's Hanwha Ocean, Kim described South Korea as the "best partner" in boosting American shipbuilding capabilities. "We are supportive of President Trump's efforts to continue to increase shipbuilding capabilities, and we're prepared to provide whatever type of legislation as well as resources behind it to be able to make that successful," he said. Regarding the Trump administration's push for "modernizing the alliance," which potentially calls for reorienting the role of US troops in Korea to deter China, Kim said related bilateral discussions should take place in a way that ensures US commitment to deterring North Korean threats, as well as addressing shared regional challenges. "I want to make sure that ... in the Indo-Pacific, (we) are able to address the array of different challenges and threats that we face. We can do that in a way that still protects extended deterrence, protects our interests here on the Korean Peninsula," Kim said. "Any changes that we would see in significant ways to troop presence, we would want to make sure that Congress has a role in oversight," he added. Kim, the first Korean American elected to the Senate, visited South Korea this week with Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Il) for meetings with government officials and business leaders. They also met with President Lee. Kim said Lee's decision to stop in Japan before going to Washington for the summit with Trump was a "brilliant move." "I can think of few opportunities that are more impactful than recommitment to the trilateral process between the United States, South Korea and Japan," he said. (Yonhap)

Samsung, TSMC face subsidy-for-shares dilemma under Trump plan
Samsung, TSMC face subsidy-for-shares dilemma under Trump plan

Korea Herald

time13 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

Samsung, TSMC face subsidy-for-shares dilemma under Trump plan

Critics argue Trump's equity demand is no subsidy but an attempt at ownership of private companies Washington is reviewing options to acquire equity stakes in foreign chipmakers such as Samsung Electronics and TSMC in return for the federal subsidies they are receiving to build factories in the US, industry sources said Wednesday. The idea has rattled the industry, with analysts dismissing it as 'unrealistic,' saying it reflects US President Donald Trump's intent to walk back on grants pledged under the former Biden administration. US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick on Tuesday openly floated the idea in reference to Intel, as the White House reportedly weighs options such as taking a 10 percent stake in the company. 'We should get an equity stake for our money,' Lutnick told CNBC, referring to Intel. 'So we'll deliver the money, which was already committed under the Biden administration, and we'll get equity in return.' Citing sources familiar with the matter, Reuters reported that Lutnick is exploring applying the same approach to other chipmakers, including Samsung. Lutnick argued that the Biden administration 'literally was giving Intel money for free, and giving TSMC money for free,' underscoring the Trump administration's critical stance on federal grants. The CHIPS and Science Act, legislated under the Biden administration, pledged subsidies to global chipmakers building plants in the US as part of a wider effort to reshore semiconductor manufacturing. 'Donald Trump turns that into saying, 'Hey, we want equity for the money. If we're going to give you the money, we want a piece of the action,'' Lutnick said, adding that any potential arrangement would not give the government governance rights in Intel. Intel has said it finalized a nearly $8 billion grant under the CHIPS and Science Act to build its factories, while TSMC was awarded $6.6 billion to expand chip production at its Arizona facilities. Samsung Electronics, which is building a $37 billion advanced chip plant in Taylor, Texas, secured a $4.75 billion subsidy package under the Biden administration last year. SK hynix is also set to begin construction of a $3.87 billion advanced packaging plant for AI memory in West Lafayette, Indiana, in the second half of this year. 'It's an unreasonable idea. The US government is effectively demanding equity in private companies — not state-run firms or startups, but already well-established foreign businesses like Samsung and TSMC. That is not a subsidy anymore, it is ownership,' said Kim Yang-paeng, a senior researcher at the Korea Institute for Industrial Economics and Trade. According to Kim, the plan reflects Trump's long-standing view that subsidies are a 'waste' and should not be handed out. 'What Washington is really saying is it wants equity equal to the subsidies, which means it's no longer a subsidy,' he said. 'US firms might accept that since it is their own government, but Samsung or TSMC will not.' In Intel's case, the Trump administration's plan to acquire a 10 percent stake is seen as roughly equivalent to the $7.86 billion in subsidies the company is set to receive, compared with its market capitalization of $110.8 billion. If applied to Samsung, the approach would translate into about a 1.6 percent stake, based on the $4.75 billion subsidy against its 414 trillion won market capitalization as of Wednesday. As the Korean chip giant is listed on the domestic stock market, Washington may instead target stakes in its US subsidiaries, such as Samsung Semiconductor and Samsung Austin Semiconductor, industry experts said.

Trump eyes air support for Ukraine, no US ground troops
Trump eyes air support for Ukraine, no US ground troops

Korea Herald

time16 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

Trump eyes air support for Ukraine, no US ground troops

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