January 31, 2026

Business

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4 min read

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What we’re covering here

• President Donald Trump said Friday he is nominating Kevin Warsh to be the next Federal Reserve chair. Warsh will take over from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, whose term as chair ends in May. The role requires Senate confirmation.

• The announcement caps an extensive search that started in September and was spearheaded by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who whittled down a list of half a dozen candidates and presented four finalists to the president.

• Trump has castigated Powell for months, calling him a “numbskull,” a “moron” and a “jerk” for not lowering interest rates more quickly. His administration also launched a criminal investigation of Powell and the Fed earlier this month, which led Powell to issue an extraordinary rebuke of Trump’s efforts to politicize the independent central bank.

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It’s about to officially become Trump’s economy

President Donald Trump speaks to the media as he walks to Marine One prior to departure from the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC, on January 27.

Once President Donald Trump’s handpicked Federal Reserve chair takes up his position at the head of the US economy, the president will have run out of excuses: This will officially become the Trump economy, for better or worse.

Throughout the first year of his second term, Trump has mostly blamed America’s affordability problems on two men: Former President Joe Biden and Fed Chair Jerome Powell, whom he accuses of mismanaging the economy and allowing prices to rise out of control.

But those excuses have fallen flat, with poll after poll showing that voters disapprove of Trump’s handling of the economy.

Once the Fed chair nominee is Senate confirmed, Trump will have claimed the economy for himself. That could be a politically precarious proposition, since the president has almost certainly overpromised on what the new Fed chair will be able to accomplish.

Here’s why.

Trump wants lower mortgage rates. A new Fed chair may not help with that

From Xenix News

President Donald Trump has often said that he wants lower interest rates in order to improve home affordability.

However, the Federal Reserve doesn’t directly set mortgage rates. Those rates largely track the 10-year Treasury yield, which rises and falls for a host of economic reasons.

“The mortgage market is very complex,” said Charlie Dougherty, a senior economist at Wells Fargo. “Yes, the Fed plays a role, but the root cause of mortgage rates being elevated is about inflation, it’s about prospects for growth and fiscal pressures.”

Average mortgage rates have stayed stubbornly just above 6% for the last several months, even after the Fed cut interest rates three consecutive times at the end of 2025.

Trump’s nominee for Fed chair, Kevin Warsh, is known as a “hawk” who supported higher rates during his previous tenure at the Fed. However, even if Warsh cuts the Fed’s benchmark interest rate more than expected, mortgage rates may not move lower.

Wells Fargo expects the 10-year Treasury yield to fall early this year before climbing again in 2027 — a shift that could push mortgage rates higher down the road. Dougherty said Warsh’s nomination doesn’t change the bank’s outlook.Read more

Trump: “We talk about it” but I didn’t ask Warsh to cut rates

US President Donald Trump speaks before signing executive orders in the Oval Office in the White House on Friday.

President Donald Trump on Friday in the Oval Office denied that he directly asked his pick for Federal Reserve chair, Kevin Warsh, to cut interest rates.

“We talk about it, and I’ve been following him, and I don’t want to ask him that question. I think it’s inappropriate, probably,” Trump said. “Probably would be allowed, but I want to keep it nice and pure. But he certainly wants to cut rates. I’ve been watching him for a long time.”

Trump has been publicly shaming current Fed Chair Jerome Powell because the central bank hasn’t lowered rates as quickly or dramatically as the president would like. That’s why some economists have questioned Trump’s pick of Warsh, who has publicly agreed with the president in recent months but has a long record from his prior time at the Fed of pushing for higher interest rates.

Trump said he wasn’t concerned about Warsh’s reputation as an inflation hawk, acknowledging that there have been times when the Fed needed to raise rates.

“Yeah, I’ve had times when I think you’ve had to really have rate hikes too,” Trump said. “But he’s very smart, very good, strong, young – pretty young – and he’s gonna do a good (job).”

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4 min read

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What we’re covering here

• The Federal Reserve is widely expected to hold its benchmark interest rate steady Wednesday after its first policy meeting of 2026, as the labor market and inflation come into better balance.

• The central bank cut rates three times last year as it monitored the economic effects of President Donald Trump’s aggressive policies. Unemployment ticked up last year and inflation moved slightly lower.

• It’s also the first time we’ll hear from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell after his extraordinary rebuke of the Trump administration. He announced earlier this month that he is under federal investigation, saying the criminal probe is a “pretext” meant to intimidate the central bank into cutting rates to the president’s liking.

• Trump has said his pick for a new Fed chair to replace Powell, whose term ends in May, will slash rates. However, the chair is just one vote on a committee of 12 officials who make policy adjustments based on economic evidence, not political pressure.

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Fed holds interest rates steady as its independence comes under threat

From Xenix News

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell during a news conference on September 17, 2025 in Washington, DC.

The Federal Reserve on Wednesday kept interest rates unchanged as the US central bank fights to maintain its ability to set interest rates without political interference.

Officials kept their benchmark lending rate at a range of 3.5-3.75%, following three consecutive rate cuts late last year. Several policymakers have said in recent public speeches they want to see the effects of those rate cuts before considering any further reductions, suggesting a pause could last for a few months.

The Fed’s latest rate decision comes at a pivotal moment in the central bank’s 112-year history, as the Supreme Court reviews a case with significant implications for the Fed’s independence. Chair Jerome Powell himself pushed back against the Trump administration’s threats against the Fed’s independence earlier this month in a stunning video.

Yes, the labor market has weakened. No, that doesn’t guarantee a rate cut

From Xenix News

A job seeker waits to talk to a recruiter at a job fair on August 28, 2025, in Sunrise, Florida.

Outside of recessions, last year was one of the weakest labor markets in decades. Additionally, the latest jobs report from December showed employers hired just 50,000 new workers — the most tepid job growth since December 2020, when employers laid off a net 183,000 workers.

On the surface, that, on top of other recent lackluster labor market data, would appear to make rate cuts a surefire thing for the Federal Reserve, given that it is tasked with setting rates at levels to promote maximum employment. (Generally speaking, lower rates can help boost the labor market by reducing employers’ borrowing costs, thereby freeing up funds to hire more workers.)

But the labor market is only half of the Fed’s responsibility; the other half is price stability (i.e. preventing higher inflation.) Cutting rates too quickly or by too much can help fuel higher inflation, especially at a time when higher tariffs and other factors are driving businesses to raise prices.

With both sides of the equation in mind, economists at Morgan Stanley anticipate the Fed will hold rates steady for longer than they previously forecast.

“Labor demand sill remains soft – with private payrolls rising by only 37k in December and 29k on a three-month moving average – but we think the Fed can live with slower employment growth so long as the unemployment rate is stable (or falling),” they said in a note earlier this month. Their expectation now is that the next rate cut will come in June.

Consumer confidence crisis?

From Xenix News

A customer shops in a supermarket in New York on January 22.

America’s economic mood deteriorated in January to its lowest level in more than a decade as consumers fretted about geopolitical tensions, affordability and President Donald Trump’s unrelenting trade war.

Americans haven’t been in this bad of a mood about the economy since 2014, according to the closely watched Consumer Confidence Index. This month, the index fell 9.7 points to its lowest reading in nearly 12 years.

Put another way: Even in the depths of the 2020 pandemic, consumers were more confident about the economy than they are now, according to the index, which is published by the nonprofit think tank The Conference Board.

To be sure, these sentiment surveys tend to tell us more about what Americans believe than about how they truly are. In recent years, especially, the gap between what consumers say they’re feeling and how they’re actually spending their money has been widening.

So this sour January mood might not translate into less spending. A separate survey from the University of Michigan that emphasizes folks’ views about their personal finances hit a five-month high in January.

That might be why Wall Street was so unbothered by the confidence reading Tuesday. US stocks hit record highs thanks to plenty of optimism about corporate earnings.

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2 min read

By

Elisabeth Buchwald,Ana Nicolaci da Costa

Stacked shipping containers in the commercial port of Barcelona on July 7, 2025.

Strasbourg, France — 

A key group of European Parliament members blocked a vote to ratify a US-European trade deal Wednesday after President Donald Trump threatened to take over Greenland and charge as much as an additional 35% tariff on countries opposed to his ambitions.

“EU-US Deal on ice indefinitely!” Bernd Lange, chair of Parliament’s trade committee, said in a post on X.

It’s unclear if the entire trade agreement, which called for 15% tariffs on European Union goods shipping to the US, has been called off or if parts that have already gone into effect will remain that way. The EU and the US came to a preliminary deal in July, putting much of it into effect before it was signed.

The news came as Trump told the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland that he did not intend to use force to acquire Greenland. But he emphasized repeatedly a demand that Europe effectively give Greenland to the United States.

“He wants to have Greenland as part of the United States as quick as possible, and he wants to have a table where we could discuss about the price he wants to buy,” Lange said Wednesday at a press conference in Strasbourg, France.

Beyond the 15% tariff rate, the agreement called for the EU to increase purchases of American agricultural and energy products. Lange accused the US of violating the terms of the agreement by threatening additional tariffs.

“Until the threats are over, so there will be no possibility for compromise,” Lange added. He seemed to suggest, though, that the EU’s commitments to purchase American military and energy products will stick.

People attend a protest against U.S. President Donald Trump's demand that the Arctic island be ceded to the U.S., calling for it to be allowed to determine its own future, in Nuuk, Greenland, January 17, 2026.

Trump has tariffs. Europe has a ‘trade bazooka.’ This Greenland standoff could get ugly, fast

Trump’s tariff threats over Greenland triggered an emergency meeting of European countries’ representatives over the weekend, and French President Emmanuel Macron reportedly asked the European Union to activate its so-called anti-coercion instrument, colloquially known as a “trade bazooka.” That could involve suspending US company licenses or taxing US services.

Collectively, trade between the US and EU was nearly $1 trillion in 2024, according to data from the US Commerce Department. A trade war between the two economies could have profound impacts for all involved.

EU leaders are set to meet in Brussels on Thursday to discuss how to retaliate if Trump’s latest tariff threats are enacted.

But Trump’s ability to follow through on his tariff threat likely hinges upon a case now before the Supreme Court challenging his most sweeping levies. The nation’s highest court is expected to issue a ruling soon.

This story has been updated with additional context and developments.

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1 min read

By Alicia Wallace of Xenix News

Figures for retail sales and wholesale inflation in September were released on Tuesday, delayed for several weeks due to the recent US government shutdown.

However, it is still uncertain when, or if, the retail sales and Producer Price Index reports for the upcoming months will be published.

The federal statistical agencies are addressing an unusual backlog of economic data due to the extended funding hiatus that hindered their ability to gather, analyze, and publish reports for over a month and a half.

Currently, several important economic reports for October – particularly the jobs report and the Consumer Price Index – will not be released in their original format. Rather, incomplete data will be published together with the November reports.

By Tuesday afternoon, the Bureau of Labor Statistics had not yet given an update regarding the release of the October PPI or a new date for the November report.

The Census Bureau still has a “TBD” attached to the October release date for retail sales.