Dollar weakens after US prosecutors launch criminal investigation into Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell – business live | Business


Justice department opens investigation into Jerome Powell as Trump ramps up campaign against Federal Reserve

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The independence and credibility of America’s central bank is under threat after the Department of Justice opened a criminal investigation into Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, knocking the US dollar.

In a startling development, US prosecutors have launched a criminal investigation into Powell over a $2.5bn renovation of the Federal Reserve’s headquarters, and into his testimony about the project to the Senate banking committee in June last year.

The move is a dramatic escalation in the long-simmering tensions between the Fed and the Trump White House, with the US president repeatedly rubbishing Powell for not cutting interest rates more quickly.

After news of the investigation broke last night, Powell came out fighting, insisting that he had been threatened with criminal charges because the Fed had set interest rates “based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the president”.

Powell’s term as chair expires in May, and Trump was already expected to appoint a more malleable successor who might lower borrowing costs.

The news that Powell is under criminal investigation has only heightened concerns that his successor could set policy for political, not monetary, reasons.

Michael Brown, senior research strategist at brokerage Pepperstone, warns that institutional confidence in the US is again called into question.

In a classic Trumpian distraction and bullying tactic, the President has upped the ante in his long-running feud with Fed Chair Powell, after the DoJ sent subpoenas to the Fed, ostensibly in relation to Powell’s testimony on renovations to the Eccles Building last year.

Let’s call a spade a spade though. This is nothing to do with building renovations, even if it would be quite ironic for a serial bankrupt property developer to try and pursue that path. Instead, it’s Trump acting like little more than a petulant child, throwing a strop yet again because he hasn’t got his own way, in this instance lower interest rates. This isn’t a construction case, but one that strikes at the very heart of Fed policy independence.

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