KEY POINTS
  • The Federal Reserve may not be cutting rates as quickly as President Trump would like, but it was Trump's tweet on trade, not Fed policy, that started the central bank's pivot toward lower interest rates.
  • When Trump tweeted about new tariffs for China on May 5, he surprised markets and businesses that had expected a negotiated deal to end the trade wars.
  • Now, the Fed has signaled it will move ahead with a rate cut, as soon as July, and the reasons are trade conflicts and sluggishness in the economy.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell holds a press conference following a two day Federal Open Market Committee policy meeting in Washington, January 30, 2019.

The road to the Fed's official policy pivot this week to lower interest rates began in early May, with a tweet.

President Donald Trump tweeted May 5 that he could slap China with new tariffs, and that Beijing was attempting to renegotiate. That sudden escalation of the trade war surprised markets and business leaders, who were looking forward to a negotiated deal between the White House and China that would end the trade conflict and roll back tariffs, instead of increasing them