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Federal justices are raising eyebrows over the extent of presidential power when it comes to monetary policy decisions. The core issue? How much control should any single branch of government have over the money supply, interest rates, and financial system stability.
Here's why this matters for the broader market: uncertainty around who actually wields monetary authority tends to spook investors. If the rules of the game keep shifting between institutions—courts, executive branch, central banks—it creates volatility and erodes confidence.
For those watching crypto and traditional finance markets, this institutional friction feeds directly into broader concerns about policy predictability. When the guardrails get fuzzy, capital tends to look for safer harbors or hedge its bets across multiple assets.
The justices' concerns essentially boil down to checks and balances. No single leader should have unchecked power over monetary levers without proper institutional oversight. It's a reminder that markets function best when the rules are clear and distributed authority prevents concentrated control.