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US midday market brief: S&P 500 edges up, but losses loom after Trump’s Fed comments

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US stocks ticked higher at midday Friday as the S&P 500 climbed 0.3%, the Nasdaq advanced 0.4%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 116 points, or 0.2%.

But the intraday gains mask a deeper reality: uncertainty about Federal Reserve leadership and questions regarding central-bank independence have unsettled traders throughout the week.

President Trump’s comments Thursday about keeping Kevin Hassett in his current National Economic Council role rather than elevating him to Fed chair injected fresh political risk into markets.

The financial system sits at a critical juncture.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s term ends in May, and the succession process has become unexpectedly contentious.

Trump’s Thursday remark: “I actually want to keep you where you are if you want to know the truth,” was directed at Hassett during a White House healthcare event.

The president emphasized that losing Hassett to the Fed would deprive his administration of one of its most vocal economic messengers.

US stocks midday: Modest intraday gains fail to erase weekly weakness

The mechanics were swift.

The dollar rebounded from session lows on Trump’s remarks, while Treasury yields ticked higher, a signal that markets are pricing in a potentially less dovish Fed outcome under Warsh compared to Hassett.

For context, Hassett has been openly aligned with Trump’s preference for lower interest rates, while Warsh is perceived by some strategists as potentially more orthodox in his monetary-policy approach.

That distinction matters enormously to long-duration assets and bond valuations.​​

Banking stocks were a rare bright spot. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley reported robust fourth-quarter earnings Thursday, sending financial shares higher.

Goldman surged 4%, and Morgan Stanley jumped nearly 6% after each delivered earnings beats.

Energy stocks benefited from a rebound in oil prices, with Brent crude fell on on reduced concerns about Iran escalation.​

However, the gains couldn’t offset deeper unease.

The S&P 500 is now down 0.3% for the week, the Nasdaq is off 0.6%, and the Dow has fallen 0.1%.

The weakness reflects investors’ parsing of what Trump’s comments mean for Fed independence and policy direction heading into critical economic data releases.​

Fed succession uncertainty clouds sentiment

The core issue isn’t the intraday stock moves; it’s the question of whether the Federal Reserve will maintain its operational independence or become subject to political pressure for lower interest rates.

Powell this week forcefully defended the Fed’s autonomy, calling the Justice Department’s criminal investigation into Fed headquarters renovations barely veiled political coercion.

Global central banks rallied to Powell’s defense, issuing a joint statement affirming the “cornerstone” role of Fed independence.​

Traders are essentially asking: Will the next Fed chair prioritize price stability or presidential preferences?

Until markets get clarity, expect volatility to remain elevated.

The modestly positive intraday tone should not mask the underlying fragility. Positioning ahead of earnings, geopolitical headlines, and Fed succession drama will keep investors defensive.

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