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President Donald Trump said Wednesday that Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has kept interest rates too high and that he might call the central bank chief.
In an angry post on Truth Social Wednesday, Trump criticized Zelenskiy for refusing to recognize Russia’s occupation of ...
White House lawyers were studying legal options for ousting the Fed chair, but senior advisers warned Trump that attempting to do so would rattle markets.
On Wall Street, the White House's constant messaging shifts are beginning to drown out the messages themselves.
Confronted with fresh warnings from financial markets, business leaders and top advisers, President Donald Trump this week eased off on two of his frequent punching bags: Jerome Powell ...
Risk-on sentiment dominated Wall Street on Wednesday, as upbeat earnings reports and conciliatory messages from the Trump ...
Some possible darker consequences of Trump’s reach for control of the Federal Reserve, such as the end of the U.S. dollar as ...
The president said he has “no intention” of ousting Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, but the administration’s willingness to ...
The president might want to admit that he’s retreating, but it’ll probably be awhile before he echoes his own rhetoric about ...
The president’s about-face on the central bank chief, following advice from his treasury and commerce secretaries, sent ...
Only 15 percent of young people believe the United States is headed in the right direction under President Donald Trump, ...
President Donald Trump said April 22 that he had “no intention” of firing Federal Reserve Chair Jerome H. Powell, even as he called on the Fed to cut interest rates.