Trump Savages Federal Reserve as Stock Plunge Worsens
President
Donald Trump has lashed out at America's central bank as a stock market whose
gains he once took credit for continued a historic plunge.
In a tweet,
Mr Trump said the Federal Reserve was "the only problem" of the
American economy.
Mr Trump's
treasury secretary meanwhile scrambled to calm investors.
However, the
Dow Jones fell more than 650 points on Monday, and is on track for its worst
December since 1931 during the Great Depression.
The turmoil
comes amid a partial government shutdown, US-China trade tensions and reports
the president has discussed firing Fed chairman Jerome Powell.
Mr Trump
continually boasted about Wall Street's steep climb during the first year of
his presidency, but has sought to deflect blame since markets hit a rough patch
in 2018.
On Sunday US
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin took the unusual step of calling the chief
executives of America's six largest banks in a bid to soothe market jitters.
On Monday,
he called top market regulators and officials from the US central bank to allay
fears about the economy.
Mr Mnuchin
hosted the call with the President's Working Group on Financial Markets to
"discuss co-ordination efforts to assure normal market operations",
according a treasury statement.
The board of
governors of the US Federal Reserve System, the Securities and Exchange
Commission and the Commodities Futures Trading Commission are on the working
group.
It is rare
for a US treasury secretary to make public his discussions with American
financial institutions. But that is exactly what Mr Mnuchin did.
He was
attempting to ease financial markets but Monday's swoon showed he did the
opposite.
So then
President Trump weighed in by tweet and renewed his criticism of the Federal
Reserve. That also did not have the desired effect. Instead of the typical
Santa Rally, we saw US investors flee stocks for safety.
Not exactly
the Christmas cheer the White House was hoping for.
What does
this mean for 2019? A lot will depend on what happens in Washington: government
shutdown, simmering trade tensions and the president's tweets.
One thing
has been made very clear: if the White House wants to calm nervous investors,
it's going to need to get much better at its messaging.
Monday saw
the worst day of Christmas Eve trading ever for US stocks.
The Dow
Jones Industrial Average dropped by 653 points, falling below 22,000.
The S&P
500 entered so-called "bear market" territory
US investors
are fretful about a range of factors including slowing economic growth at home
and internationally, though US economic data is still strong.
Mr Trump's ongoing
trade war with China as well as Defence Secretary Jim Mattis's surprise
resignation have also unsettled investors.
In addition,
a partial US government shutdown began at midnight on Friday after Congress
refused to fund President Trump's planned US-Mexico border wall.
The shutdown
could continue until the opening of the next Congress on 3 January
A Sunday
statement from the treasury took the rare step of divulging details about Mr
Mnuchin's discussions with the top US banks.
"The
[bank's chief executives] confirmed that they have ample liquidity available
for lending to consumer, business markets, and all other market
operations," the statement said.'
"We
continue to see strong economic growth in the US," Mr Mnuchin added.
Earlier, he
dismissed reports that President Trump had discussed the possibility of firing
the Federal Reserve chairman after the bank raised interest rates last week.
The US
treasury secretary tweeted that he had spoken to the president, who insisted he
"never suggested firing" Jerome Powell and did not believe he had the
right to do so.
Jared
Bernstein, who was economic adviser to former US Vice-President Joe
Biden, told the Washington Post: "The markets are already nervous
enough.
"It's
like sending out a message saying our space shields can intercept incoming
asteroids. Uh, I didn't know there were any coming our way."
Oliver
Pursche, a board member at Bruderman Asset Management, said: "More than
anything else right now, Washington and politics are absolutely driving
investor sentiment and market direction and that can turn on a dime."
Win Thin,
head of global currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman, told the
Financial Times: "At best, Mnuchin made a rookie policy mistake in trying
to reassure markets; at worst, Mnuchin knows something that the markets
don't."
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-us-canada
No comments