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Powell blocks Trump seat as AI capex masks consumer stress

Monday, May 18, 2026 · from 3 podcasts, 4 episodes

Jerome Powell broke a 77-year precedent by staying on as a Fed governor after his chairmanship term expired. He moved to an office a few doors down from new chair Kevin Warsh. Powell’s leverage was blocking a second Trump nominee to the seven-member board, following a spurious Justice Department investigation into Fed HQ renovations that was dropped only after a Republican senator retaliated.

"Powell argued he stayed because threats risked politicizing the Fed's monetary policy."

- The Daily

By holding his seat, Powell turned the Fed’s succession into a Supreme Court-style drama. Officials now game their retirement dates based on who sits in the Oval Office. Powell’s presence keeps the board at full capacity and limits Warsh’s power from day one.

Warsh built his reputation as an inflation hawk, criticizing the Fed’s balance sheet expansion from under $1 trillion pre-2008 to nearly $9 trillion post-pandemic. To secure Trump’s nomination, he softened his stance on rates. His first test comes in June: economic data suggests holding rates steady to fight lingering inflation, but the president demands cuts. If Warsh cuts, he loses the Fed staff’s respect; if he holds, he faces the Twitter-fueled rage that ended Powell’s chairmanship.

Meanwhile, massive AI capital expenditure is propping up the entire economy. Neil Dutta on Forward Guidance notes this is the largest capex boom in decades, surpassing the late 1990s. AI spending fuels corporate earnings, which drive stock prices, which then juice consumer spending via a wealth effect.

"This loop masks underlying weakness. Real disposable income growth is anemic, yet consumption remains steady because households treat their equity gains as income substitution."

- Neil Dutta, Forward Guidance

Felix Jauvin adds that on a real basis, retail spending has flipped negative. A $47 billion tax refund buffer against high energy prices is hitting its limit, with 90-day credit card delinquencies reaching cycle highs. The bottom half of the K-shaped economy has run out of runway.

The Fed’s policy tilt is shifting hawkish because there’s no trade-off: the labor market is stable, inflation remains above target, and equity markets are at highs. Dutta expects the Fed to soon remove its ‘additional adjustments’ easing bias language from statements. For the Fed to cut, something in the economy must actually break.

Democratic unity on crypto cracked. The Senate Banking Committee advanced the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act in a 15-9 vote, with Democrats Ruben Gallego and Angela Alsobrooks joining all 13 Republicans. Elizabeth Warren led the opposition, claiming the bill “declares open season” on defrauding consumers, but her amendments targeting crypto mixers were blocked.

Bitcoin’s brief climb to $82,000 after the news was crushed by macro gravity. 10-year Treasury yields hit 4.52%, their highest in ten months, as sticky CPI data showed 3.8% year-over-year inflation. The carnage wasn’t isolated: silver dropped nearly 10%, and Japanese 10-year yields reached multi-year highs. Institutional investors used the yield surge to take profits from spot ETFs.

The question is how far the dominos fall. Powell’s boardroom standoff ensures the Fed’s independence faces its most direct political test yet, while the AI-fueled wealth effect papering over consumer stress depends on hyperscalers continuing their debt-funded spending spree.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

Stretch Sketch | Bitcoin NewsMay 15

  • The Senate Banking Committee advanced the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act with a 15-9 vote, aiming to create a federal framework for digital asset trading, stablecoins, and intermediaries, splitting oversight between the SEC and CFTC.
  • Senator Elizabeth Warren led opposition, arguing the Clarity Act was crypto industry-written, weakened investor protections dating back to 1929, preempted state anti-fraud rules, and enabled risky bank exposure to volatile crypto.
  • Democratic amendments to the Clarity Act, proposed by senators like Warren, Reed, and Van Hollen, aimed to strengthen sanctions against crypto mixers, block illicit stablecoin flows, and outlaw DeFi protocols used for money laundering, but were rejected.
  • Republicans, led by Senator Cynthia Lummis, argued that existing bill sections already tie digital asset intermediaries to the Bank Secrecy Act and expand Treasury's special measures authority, providing sufficient federal oversight.
  • Macroeconomic factors, including rising 10-year US Treasury yields at 4.52% and April's 3.8% CPI, are driving Bitcoin's recent institutional sell-off, with analysts linking these to Middle East tensions and elevated energy prices.
  • Japan's 10-year bond yield reached 2.72% after a 3.5% rise, marking its highest level in a very long time, reflecting global bond market stress also impacting Dow Jones, S&P, and NASDAQ.
  • MicroStrategy's STRC preferred stock, offering an 11.5% monthly dividend, saw a record daily trading volume of $1.53 billion, fueling the company's Bitcoin acquisitions and creating a predictable monthly ex-dividend cycle.
  • MicroStrategy plans to repurchase $1.5 billion of its 2029 convertible notes at a discount, paying $1.38 billion, listing available cash, equity offerings, and potential Bitcoin sales as funding sources.
  • Strive's SATA preferred stock will offer daily cash dividends from June 16, with a 13% annual rate effectively yielding 13.88% due to more frequent compounding, aiming to amplify Bitcoin holdings.
  • The Roundhill Memory ETF (DRAM) became the fastest-growing ETF in history within five weeks, tracking computer memory chipmakers like Micron, which the host views as an AI-driven bubble despite ongoing build contracts.
  • Thorchain halted all trading after a cross-chain exploit for $10.8 million, impacting deployments across Bitcoin, Ethereum, and BSC and causing its native token, RUNE, to drop 12%, prompting a warning about DeFi risks.
Also from this episode: (2)

Politics (2)

  • Chairman Tim Scott framed the Clarity Act as a turning point to protect consumers, foster innovation in the US, and counter illicit financing, emphasizing its role in addressing a regulatory gray zone.
  • Signal announced it may exit Canada if forced to comply with Bill C-22, a lawful access bill requiring surveillance capabilities that could compromise end-to-end encryption, with VPN provider Windscribe echoing similar concerns.

The Consumer Cushion Is Almost Gone | Weekly RoundupMay 15

  • Felix points to Yuri Tim Fidelity data showing earnings estimates are surging at a pace comparable to 2018.
  • Jack believes the current market is a policy-enabled bubble, different from historical examples like 2000, and argues it can last longer without a Fed policy reversal.
  • Jack notes bond issuance in 2025 has already surpassed 2024's total, with hyperscalers like Microsoft and Google comprising a major and growing share of the debt market.
  • A JP Morgan analysis suggests about $80 billion in passive high-yield fund flows could be unlocked to buy hyperscaler debt if the market is recategorized, providing a long-term bullish tailwind.
  • Jack highlights JP Morgan data showing public high-yield debt is stable with solid coverage ratios, while riskier leverage is concentrated in private markets.
  • Jack warns of short-term froth in derivatives, noting levered long semiconductor ETF AUM has gone parabolic and implied volatility is in the 90th percentile relative to realized volatility.
  • Felix observes retail sales data shows spending shifting toward gasoline due to high prices, with discretionary categories like autos and clothing weakening, indicating a pressured consumer.
  • April CPI came in at 0.6% month-over-month, hotter than expected, leading to negative real retail sales growth despite a nominal 0.5% headline increase.
  • Felix argues recent tax refunds, totaling $47 billion above last year, are acting as a shock absorber for consumers against high energy prices rather than a spending stimulus.
  • Consumer delinquency rates are rising, with credit card balances 90+ days delinquent hitting cycle highs, indicating balance sheets are being stretched.
  • Jack notes only cap-weighted tech indices are at highs, while equal-weight indices and retail stocks are 'smoked', illustrating a severe K-shaped market and economy.
  • Jack argues the bottom leg of the K-shaped economy has been in a recession since late 2023 or early 2024, exacerbated by negative real wages from the recent inflation spike.
  • Jack calculates that even with a 2.4-4% forward inflation rate, year-over-year CPI won't return to 2% for another year due to base effects from the energy surge.
  • Jack contends Fed liquidity measures supporting stocks have trapped policymakers, preventing rate cuts to help Main Street because inflation remains a problem.
Also from this episode: (1)

Business (1)

  • Jack says tariff revenues have fallen 30% from their October peak to $22 billion monthly, with the effective tariff rate dropping from 13% to 8%, signaling an unwinding of trade policy.

The Fed Is Losing Its Easing Bias While AI Props Up The Economy | Neil DuttaMay 13

  • Neil Dutta argues the Fed is pushing towards a hawkish stance because the labor market is stable, inflation remains above target, and equity markets are at highs, leaving little trade-off to focus on anything but inflation.
  • The current AI-driven capex boom is the largest in their careers, surpassing the late 1990s. Dutta warns its eventual slowdown will be a major macro issue, threatening equity appreciation and consumer spending.
  • Dutta expects the Fed to soon remove its 'additional adjustments' easing bias language from statements, given current economic conditions, though an actual rate hike is less certain.
  • Geopolitical energy shocks, U.S. energy exports, and tariffs are seen as key drivers of current inflation, creating a tension between the Fed's mandate and White House policy.
Also from this episode: (6)

Macro (3)

  • Dutta states real consumer spending over the last two quarters is running below 2%.
  • Aggregate weekly payrolls, a measure of jobs, hours, and earnings, has been negative over the last three months, indicating household balance sheets are under pressure.
  • Manufacturing production is only up about 0.5% over the past year, leading Dutta to be skeptical of a significant industrial renaissance despite positive PMI readings.

Labor (2)

  • Wage growth remains sluggish at around 3.5%, as measured by average hourly earnings and the Employment Cost Index, which Dutta sees as evidence labor market conditions are not tight.
  • Non-residential construction, including data centers and heavy engineering, is a major driver of recent employment growth, offsetting earlier reliance solely on healthcare.

AI Infrastructure (1)

  • Dutta questions the 'golden age' productivity thesis because prices for key tech inputs like chips and compute are rising, unlike the deflationary 1990s, and real income growth is weak.

A New Leader — and a New Showdown — at the FedMay 14

  • Jerome Powell broke Fed tradition by staying as a governor after his chair term ended; the last precedent was in 1947 under President Truman's request.
  • An investigation by U.S. Attorney Janine Piro into Fed HQ renovations was spurious but created a political blockade; Senator Tom Tillis refused to advance Fed nominations until it closed.
  • Powell stated he stayed because threats risked politicizing the Fed's monetary policy; his leverage was blocking Trump from appointing another governor.
  • Kevin Warsh served as Fed governor during the 2008 crisis and left in 2011 over disagreements on interventionism.
  • Warsh criticizes the Fed's expanded balance sheet from under $1T pre-2008 to nearly $9T post-pandemic; he argues it exacerbates inequality and threatens independence.
  • Colby Smith notes high inflation post-pandemic stemmed from Biden's stimulus, supply chain constraints, and Fed overstimulus.
  • Warsh, historically an inflation hawk, shifted tone toward supporting rate cuts during his nomination, raising concerns about political motivation.
  • Current inflation risks from war and high oil prices make rate cuts economically disastrous, putting Warsh in conflict with Trump's demands.
  • Warsh's first June meeting as chair faces a credibility crisis: cutting rates appears political, while holding them maintains Powell's stance.
  • Powell's continued presence as a governor politicizes Fed succession, mirroring Supreme Court dynamics and altering future policymakers' exit calculus.