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And Powell is still in charge
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Both Washington and Wall Street were watching today as the Federal Reserve officials weighed in on interest rates amid a lot of pressure from President Donald Trump. Chris Anstey, an economics editor in Boston, is here with a rundown. Plus: How Charlie Kirk’s death became a memecoin, the Elon, Inc., finale is live now, and the dean of MIT Sloan discusses threats to higher ed.

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Although the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates, as universally expected, on Wednesday, it’s far from clear that the US central bank has embarked on a new policy-easing cycle.

“You could think of this, in a way, as a risk-management cut,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in a news conference following the 25-basis-point cut in the benchmark rate, to a target range of 4% to 4.25%.

He said the move reflected “the much lower level of job creation and other evidence of softening in the labor market” apparent in data in recent weeks. As for where the economy is headed from here, however, he flagged risks to both of the Fed’s main mandates: price stability and full employment.

The Federal Reserve’s decision to cut rates plays on a television on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday. Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg

He was also reasonably clear in saying these risks are coming in part from President Donald Trump’s policies. Reduced immigration has contributed to the slowdown in job creation, and “perhaps all of the increase in inflation over the course of this year” comes from goods prices, which have been affected by Trump’s tariff hikes.

It’s not US trading partners who are paying those tariffs, he specified. Powell also cautioned that price pressures are expected to “continue to build over the course of the rest of the year and into next year.”

But “our tools can’t do two things at once,” the Fed chief said—in other words, tame inflation and support the job market. So policy isn’t on any preset path now.

That’s not at all where Trump and his allies see things, as was apparent in the Fed policymaker projections released alongside the rate decision Wednesday. One “dot” in the updated plot of projections by Fed governors and reserve bank presidents for the benchmark rate incorporated 50-basis-point cuts today and at the Fed’s two remaining meetings this year—more easing than anyone else predicted.

Fed watchers said there’s little doubt that dot came from Stephen Miran, who until he joined the Fed board on Tuesday was Trump’s White House chief economist.

Miran dissented in favor of a half-point cut in Wednesday’s vote but got nobody else’s support. Which was a bit of a surprise, as some analysts had anticipated the other two Trump appointees on the Fed board, Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman, would be on the same page.

“The only way for any voter to really move things around is to be incredibly persuasive,” Powell said. Apparently, Miran was not.

The Fed chair, who has been on the board himself since 2012, seemed to push back at the idea that Trump could bully the institution into a rate-cut path that incurred economic danger. To shift policy requires “really strong arguments based on the data and one’s understanding of the economy.”

“And that’s how it’s going to work,” he said. “That’s in the DNA of the institution. That’s not going to change.”

For good measure, Powell also pushed back against Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s call for an independent review of the US central bank, saying he was “not going to comment on anything the secretary says.” While he said the Fed is open to “always trying to do better,” he also highlighted that the Fed already just did a policy framework review, and is going through a 10% headcount reduction.

Perhaps most provocative to Trump and his team, Powell continued to hold out the possibility that he stays on the Fed board even after his term as chair ends in May. (His governorship runs to January 2028.) That would limit Trump’s ability to revamp its leadership. “I have nothing new on that for you today.”

For now at least, Wednesday demonstrated that it’s still a Powell Fed, and very far from a Trump one.

RELATED: On today’s Big Take podcast, Fed and US economy reporter Amara Omeokwe and host David Gura discuss what the rate cut says about the state of the US job market, the broader economy and the central bank’s independence. Subscribe to the Big Take podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or iHeart.

In Brief

Every Big News Event Is a Memecoin Now

Charlie Kirk. Photo illustration: Daniel Zender for Bloomberg Businessweek; Photo: Getty Images

Evan Rademaker was sitting in his office in Tampa, Florida, on Sept. 10 when he heard the news of Charlie Kirk’s shooting. The first thing he did was check his social media feed on X to follow the developing story. The second thing he did was check the memecoin market.

Often when there’s a major news event, Rademaker, a 30-year-old executive at a solar panel company, looks to see which new tokens are appearing on Pump.fun, a website where crypto enthusiasts launch, trade and discuss memecoins. The site serves as a kind of news feed, as users create and promote tokens pegged to whatever person or event happens to be drawing attention that day.

Minutes after Kirk was shot, tokens associated with him started to appear: “Pray For Kirk Coin,” “DEAD KIRK” and “Charlie Kirk’s dog,” among dozens of others. While many of the coins’ creators pitched the tokens as memorials to Kirk or sources of charity for his family, each was fundamentally an attempt to turn Kirk’s death into profit.

Rademaker bought into the RIP Charlie Kirk token only to see its market plummet. Then he and others staged a takeover. Christopher Beam takes a look at the memecoin ecosystem that makes it all possible: Crypto Bros Are Trying to Monetize Charlie Kirk’s Death

On the Last Episode of Elon, Inc.

This is the final episode of Elon, Inc., and it comes at a fitting point in the story of the highly controversial entrepreneur Elon Musk. The podcast was launched around the time the South Africa native bought and rebranded Twitter, transforming a mainstream social media platform into something else entirely. Now the podcast finds a natural conclusion with his full return to his companies, his exit from the Trump administration and the unprecedented governmental upheaval, mass firings and grim global consequences he left in his wake.

To reflect on this tumultuous timeline, David Papadopoulos gathers the best and brightest Musk experts the Bloomberg newsroom has to offer—including Businessweek’s Max Chafkin and Bloomberg News Musk reporter Dana Hull, technology reporter Kurt Wagner and editor Sarah Frier—to go through the most memorable stories from the past few years and peek into the future of Musk’s empire and potential political ambitions.

Listen on Apple, Spotify, iHeart and the Bloomberg Terminal, or click below.

Musk coverage will continue on Everybody’s Business: Hosts Stacey Vanek Smith and Max Chafkin take a look at the week’s business news and break down what you need to know, with the help of Businessweek journalists, experts and the people and businesses trying to navigate the economy every day. Sign up here for new episodes, available Fridays.

A Q&A With the New Dean at MIT

Rick Locke, dean of the MIT Sloan School of Management, on Sept. 4. Photographer: Cassandra Klos for Bloomberg Businessweek

When he was 14 years old and reading John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, Richard Locke grew so outraged over the mistreatment of farm workers that he stormed down to his local supermarket and joined a picket line.

A half-century later, as he adjusts to his new role as the dean of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management, Locke’s youthful idealism—and his restlessness and big vision—are still intact. A lean and energetic overachiever who hits the gym each morning at 6, Locke speaks with zeal of the “persistent local and global challenges affecting nearly every aspect of the human condition” and vows to help Sloan’s “brilliant, curious students” address urgent global problems, like climate change, the ethical riddle of artificial intelligence and the shortcomings of our health-care system.

Locke answered questions for Businessweek about MIT’s “superpower,” preparing students for the Trump economy and more: MIT Sloan’s New Dean Is Ready to Tackle Threats to Higher Ed

See the new rankings of top B-schools here.

Oilfield Waste

6.4 million
That’s how many barrels of crude petroleum are produced each day in the Permian Basin. For each one, three to five barrels of salt and chemical-laden wastewater are generated. Texas oil regulators have allowed producers to keep pumping this wastewater into shallow wells, despite warnings about leaks, creating a toxic crisis.

Ice Cream Advocacy

“Ben & Jerry’s has been silenced, sidelined for fear of upsetting those in power.”
Jerry Greenfield
Co-founder of Ben & Jerry’s
Jerry Greenfield is resigning from the ice cream company he started in 1978, saying the brand’s freedom to speak out on social issues has been stifled by parent company Unilever.

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