President Trump has repeatedly pressured the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates, claiming in a recent NBC interview that “there’s no reason to raise interest rates.” However, according to a recent report from financial site The Motley Fool, economic data and market indicators suggest his seven-word assertion requires a reality check.
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Since Trump’s inauguration in January 2025, he has publicly criticized former Fed Chair Jerome Powell and the Federal Open Market Committee for not aggressively slashing rates. The FOMC has lowered the federal funds rate six times between September 2024 and December 2025, but the current range of 3.5% to 3.75% remains well above Trump’s stated target of 1% or below.
Trump’s push for lower rates has multiple motivations. Rate cuts would encourage business borrowing, potentially fueling AI data center investments and job growth. Lower rates would also reduce mortgage costs and make homeownership more affordable. Most significantly, lower borrowing costs would ease the burden of servicing the nation’s ballooning federal debt, which has exceeded $1.38 trillion annually since the decade began.
Yet inflation tells a different story, The Motley Fool reports. In February, trailing 12-month inflation stood at a modest 2.4%, aligned with the Fed’s 2% target. However, Trump’s February military action against Iran disrupted approximately 20 million barrels of daily petroleum production—representing 20% of global supply. This energy crisis has dramatically reshaped the inflation landscape.
Energy prices have soared in response, lifting trailing 12-month inflation from 2.4% in February to an estimated 4.18% in May. Multiple inflation measures reached their highest levels since 2023: Consumer Price Index inflation at 3.8%, Personal Consumption Expenditures at 3.8%, and Producer Price Index inflation at 6%. Services inflation and shelter costs have also climbed to their highest levels since mid-2025.
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The effects extend beyond gas pumps. According to The Motley Fool’s analysis, energy supply shocks typically unfold in stages, with delayed inflationary impacts on businesses proving particularly problematic. As higher transportation and production costs filter through the economy, inflation can intensify and persist longer than initial price spikes suggest.
These economic realities point toward interest rate hikes, not cuts, The Motley Fool argues. Core Personal Consumption Expenditures—the Fed’s preferred inflation measure—continue edging higher despite expectations for modest overall inflation declines. FOMC meeting minutes from April indicate a majority of members favored removing the easing bias statement, a preliminary step toward rate increases.
Futures markets are betting against Trump’s position. According to The Motley Fool, the CME Group’s FedWatch Tool shows a 71.3% probability of at least one rate hike by December 2026, based on June 8 data. Trump’s handpicked Fed successor, Kevin Warsh, has demonstrated hawkish voting tendencies during his previous FOMC tenure.
While Wall Street would prefer Trump’s assessment to prevail, The Motley Fool concludes that economic precedent and current data suggest interest rate hikes loom ahead.
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