The Inflation Problem Nobody Wants to Talk About
Investor Kevin O'Leary, better known as "Mr. Wonderful" from Shark Tank, has a message for anyone expecting the Federal Reserve to start cutting rates aggressively: not so fast. Speaking on Fox Business' "The Big Money Show" Sunday, O'Leary made the case that inflation is still "north of 3%" and represents "a hidden tax on every American."
His bigger concern? Political pressure on the Fed to lower rates could backfire spectacularly. "If we push the Fed to lower rates while inflation is rising, we risk a policy disaster," O'Leary said. He emphasized that "the Fed must stay independent" to preserve U.S. credibility with global investors.
O'Leary doesn't expect the central bank to cut rates anytime soon, pointing to its dual mandate of maintaining full employment while targeting 2% inflation. The problem is we're nowhere near that 2% target, and certain policy decisions are making things worse.
Tariffs Are Making the Inflation Problem Worse
O'Leary highlighted tariff-driven cost pressures as a complicating factor. "Everybody debates the tariff thing," he said, but the reality is straightforward: when the U.S. imposes tariffs on commodities it doesn't produce domestically, "it's 100% inflationary because we don't have it, so we're making ourselves pay more."
He rattled off examples including "potash," "bauxite for aluminum," "pineapples," and "bananas," arguing that policymakers "gotta fine-tune the tariffs." The broader risk, he stressed, is cutting rates while inflation is still accelerating. "If you don't get it under control and you lower rates while inflation is actually increasing, you risk a policy disaster," he said. "And I don't think the world wants to see that."
On the growing political pressure facing the Fed, O'Leary was blunt: "Fed-bashing is a sport, I love to watch it." But he added that the central bank "should be" independent from the executive branch. Even if the Fed does move, O'Leary expects nothing more than a modest 25-basis-point adjustment given the current inflationary environment.
Markets Are Betting on a Rate Cut Anyway
Despite O'Leary's warnings, financial markets are pricing in an 87.2% probability of a 25-basis-point rate cut at Tuesday's Federal Open Market Committee meeting, according to the CME Group's FedWatch tool.
There's some reason for optimism in the data. The Core Personal Consumption Expenditure price index, the Fed's preferred inflation gauge, cooled slightly from 2.9% to 2.8%, coming in just below expectations of 2.9%. Meanwhile, consumer spending surged by $65.1 billion, or 0.3%, in September, showing the economy still has momentum.
But not everyone thinks a rate cut makes sense. Former Kansas City Fed president Tom Hoenig believes the central bank is about to make a mistake. "The economy is doing reasonably well," he noted, with unemployment hovering around 4.1%. He sees no reason for easing when the "inflation dragon is still breathing fire."
The tension here is real: markets want relief, but the inflation problem hasn't gone away. O'Leary's warning about a "policy disaster" might sound dramatic, but it reflects a legitimate concern that cutting rates too soon could reignite price pressures and force the Fed into an even tougher spot down the road. Sometimes the hardest thing to do is nothing, especially when everyone's screaming at you to do something.