Federal Reserve chairman contender Kevin Hassett has once again repeated that the central bank will stay independent even if he ends up as chair. He said he wouldFederal Reserve chairman contender Kevin Hassett has once again repeated that the central bank will stay independent even if he ends up as chair. He said he would

Hassett says Fed will stay independent despite Trump pressure

2025/12/15 04:54

Federal Reserve chairman contender Kevin Hassett has once again repeated that the central bank will stay independent even if he ends up as chair.

He said he would hear President Trump out because the president has “very strong and well-founded views,” but the rate path would still come from the Federal Open Market Committee.

He also said Trump’s opinions would not override the votes of the policymakers who set the federal funds rate. He made that point after Trump said he “should have a role” in speaking to whoever is running the central bank.

Hassett explained that he already talks to Trump every day as the head of the National Economic Council and said he discusses monetary policy with him now.

He said that would not change if he became Fed chair, though the conversations would not carry any formal weight.

He added that Trump’s view could be raised inside the committee only if it is backed by data. He was also clear that the president’s voice would have “no weight” compared with voting members.

Reporting inflation and spending claims

Margaret Brennan pressed Hassett on the administration’s claim that prices are dropping. She pointed to the Consumer Price Index rising 3% year over year and the personal consumption index rising 2.8% year over year.

Hassett said Trump showed charts during a speech in Pennsylvania that tracked item-level changes. He said prescription drugs rose 9% under Joe Biden and are now down six-tenths of a percent this year.

He said gasoline fell from record highs and said Trump also pointed to eggs during that event. He said inflation came from micro shocks like avian flu and macro drivers like large deficits and an accommodative Fed. He said tariff effects are “mixed.”

Hassett said the deficit is on track to come in $600 billion lower than last year and said the trade deficit is half of what it was. He said those numbers move inflation toward the Fed’s 2% target.

Margaret asked when voters would feel the impact. Hassett said sentiment usually drops during government shutdowns and said the economy has 4% growth. He said income growth is up about $1,200 this year and that strong wallets helped produce the biggest Black Friday. He said real purchasing power fell by about $3,000 under Biden and is now up $1,200 this year.

Hassett pointed out that groceries went from $400 to $525 per month under Biden and said the cost is down this year but still has room to fall. He said tariffs were cut on some food items and said, “If we don’t make it here, then we don’t tariff it.”

He also said oil prices are low enough that the administration has room to act against Venezuelan oil flows.

He said he is “not a foreign policy guy,” but said black-market oil shipments keep sanctioned countries afloat and the U.S. is slowing those fleets. He said he does not expect global prices to move because those nations “are already on the ropes.”

Addressing jobs data and Fed short list

Margaret then asked about the Fed’s statement that job gains slowed and about CEOs expecting lower hiring in 2026. Hassett said the Fed sees stronger growth ahead and said the upcoming data would give a clearer picture.

He said surveys are hard to pin down and said the household survey is the one he trusts. He said the October household survey is missing, but November’s release will matter for judging the job market.

Margaret also asked about Trump naming him and Kevin Warsh as finalists for Fed chair. She played Trump’s comment that he should “have a role” in speaking to the Fed. Hassett said he already talks to Trump daily and said he enjoys those talks.

He said he would keep speaking with Trump “even if I were Fed chair or if I wasn’t Fed chair.” He said he would expect Warsh to do the same if Warsh is selected.

Hassett said every Fed chair speaks with market experts, but stressed again that Trump’s opinion would not outweigh a voting member. He said the only thing he can do is take a sound argument to the committee and let the panel decide.

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Ripple CEO Confirms Privacy as Next Stage for XRP’s Institutional Expansion

Ripple CEO Confirms Privacy as Next Stage for XRP’s Institutional Expansion

Ripple advances XRP privacy to attract major institutional blockchain adoption. Confidential transactions and smart contracts set to reshape XRP Ledger. New privacy features aim to balance compliance with institutional confidentiality. The XRP community witnessed a significant revelation after Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse confirmed that privacy will drive the next phase of XRP’s institutional adoption. According to Vet, the discussion between him and Garlinghouse centered on strengthening privacy within the XRP ecosystem. This development aligns with the broader goal of creating a compliant yet confidential environment for institutional transactions. Ripple has progressively built the XRP Ledger into a robust infrastructure for real-world use cases. It has introduced decentralized identifiers, on-chain credentials, and permissioned domains to ensure compliance and security. Moreover, the network now features multipurpose tokens that simplify tokenization while its native decentralized exchange merges AMM liquidity with a traditional order book. Despite these advancements, one crucial element remains—privacy. Also Read: Swift Exec Mocks XRP as “Fax Machine,” Sparks Furious Clash with Crypto Fans Developers and Ripple Leadership Target Privacy Layer for Institutional Use Developers and Ripple executives agree that privacy will complete the ecosystem’s institutional framework. The upcoming privacy layer includes functions under proposal XLS-66, allowing institutions to lend and borrow assets using tokenized collateral. This system leverages zero-knowledge proofs to conceal sensitive balance and transaction data while maintaining compliance visibility for regulators. Hence, institutions can protect competitive data without compromising transparency. Ripple’s Senior Director of Engineering, Ayo Akinyele, emphasized the scale of this transformation. He stated that trillions in institutional assets will likely transition on-chain over the next decade. To achieve this, his team is developing confidential multipurpose tokens scheduled for launch in the first quarter of 2026. These tokens will enable private collateral management and secure asset handling across financial platforms. Smart Contracts and Privacy Bridge to Institutional Era Smart escrows proposed under XLS-100 and upcoming smart contracts in XLS-101 are expected to support these privacy-driven functions. Together, they will form the foundation for private institutional transactions within the XRP Ledger. This strategic focus marks a defining step toward positioning XRP as a trusted infrastructure for large-scale financial institutions. As privacy becomes the bridge connecting compliance with confidentiality, Ripple’s roadmap signals its readiness to lead blockchain adoption in traditional finance. Also Read: Shiba Inu Approaches Critical Price Zone as Bulls and Bears Battle for Control The post Ripple CEO Confirms Privacy as Next Stage for XRP’s Institutional Expansion appeared first on 36Crypto.
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