The US Supreme Court today dealt a decisive blow to President Trump’s attempt to fire a Federal Reserve Governor, ruling that the President cannot remove members of the central bank’s board without cause. The decision, which came down at 10:00 AM Eastern Time, sent ripples through financial markets on both sides of the Atlantic. For London’s trading desks, it was a welcome dose of institutional sanity in an increasingly erratic White House.
The case, Trump v. Federal Reserve Governor, centred on whether the President’s sweeping executive power extends to the quasi-independent Fed. The Court, in a 6-3 ruling, said no. “The Federal Reserve’s structure is designed to insulate monetary policy from political pressure,” Chief Justice Roberts wrote for the majority. “Removal only for cause preserves that independence.” The three dissenting justices argued that the President’s constitutional authority over executive branch officials is absolute, but the majority held that the Fed’s unique role as a central bank warrants special protection.
UK markets, which have been watching the saga with growing unease, reacted positively. The pound sterling briefly firmed against the dollar on the news, while gilt yields edged lower as investors priced in a lower risk premium for US sovereign debt. “It’s a classic sign of capital seeking safe havens,” said one senior currency trader in the City. “The US has just proven that its institutions can check executive overreach. That’s exactly what global markets want to see.”
The immediate market impact was modest: the S&P 500 rose 0.3% in afternoon trading, while the US dollar index slipped 0.1%. But the symbolic weight is considerable. Since taking office, Trump has repeatedly attacked Fed Chair Jay Powell and other governors for their rate-setting decisions, calling them “loco” and “my biggest threat”. The White House had argued that the President must have the power to remove any official who does not carry out his agenda, even at a politically independent central bank.
For UK investors, the ruling reinforces a crucial lesson: the independence of central banks is not a political convenience but a structural necessity. The Bank of England, which has its own political protections, saw its credibility reaffirmed by association. “If the Fed were to become a tool of the White House, global monetary policy would be destabilised,” said a former BoE official. “The Supreme Court has ensured that won’t happen overnight.”
But the battle is not over. The White House has indicated it may seek legislation to restructure the Fed, potentially curbing its regulatory powers or changing the terms of governors. Such a move would face a steep uphill battle in a divided Congress, but it signals that the President is far from retreating. The ruling also opens the door to further legal challenges over other independent agencies, such as the SEC or the FTC.
In the meantime, the Fed retains its freedom to set rates based on data, not tweets. That is good news for inflation hawks who have warned that political interference could lead to a loss of confidence in the dollar. The UK, which imports heavily from the US, would feel the effects of a weaker dollar through higher import prices and imported inflation. For now, that risk has been pushed back.
Markets will continue to watch for any further escalation, but today’s judgment is a reminder that even in turbulent political times, institutions matter. The City, with its long memory for crises past, knows that the worst crashes often follow political encroachment on central bank independence. Today’s ruling is a small but significant check against that trend. Long may it last.








