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“I’d love to fire his ass,” President Donald Trump said of Fed Chair Jerome Powell today, drawing laughs at the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum. Trump went on to threaten Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s job too. When you elect the “you’re fired” guy, you get what you get, I guess.

The President has been riding Powell for months over interest rates, which he insists are more than triple where they should be. But Powell doesn’t set rates alone, and just-released minutes from the October Fed meeting showed officials were divided on their most recent rate cut, and December's cut is far from certain.

The thing is, setting monetary policy is hard right now, thanks in part to the data blackout from the government shutdown (more on that below) and President Trump’s tariffs, which have strong potential to drive up prices on a variety of goods. With that, let’s look at a key skirmish in the ongoing trade war with China. — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor

A soybean field in China, 2022.
STR/Getty Images
China is buying U.S. soybeans again. Will it be enough for farmers?
Trump says China committed to buying 12 million metric tons of soybeans in 2025. But that’s less than half of what they bought last year. Marketplace’s Savannah Peters breaks it down.

Soybeans have become a flashpoint in President Trump’s trade war with China. But China’s moratorium on purchasing U.S. soybeans appears to be over. 

Chinese buyers put in a big order this week, bringing the total volume for 2025 up to almost 1 million tons. That’s a small step toward the 12 million tons Trump says China has committed to buying before the end of the year. 

For context, that would amount to less than half of what it imported last year. 1 million tons of U.S. soybeans is a fraction of what China would normally have purchased by November. 

But it’s more than zero tons, which is what we were looking at before President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping started talking. 

“It’s also psychologically good for the market because the markets look at this and go, ‘Oh, this is the first of more to come,’” said Stephen Nicholson, global sector strategist for grains and oilseeds at Rabobank.

He said there’s reason to be skeptical: Xi hasn’t actually confirmed that commitment to ramp up orders by the end of the year. Plus, the supply chain won’t reboot overnight.

“By the time you get all the buying done, you know the logistics, the vessels in place, get it loaded, it’s just going to be really tough,” Nicholson said.

And China’s track-record of sticking to trade war promises is rocky, according to Kristen Owen, an agriculture sector senior analyst at Oppenheimer. 

“We’ve seen this playbook before where there is a commitment and ultimately China becomes a price-sensitive buyer,” she said.

And you know who’s gearing up for a bumper crop of cheap soybeans? Brazil and Argentina — the countries that have been stepping in to supply the Chinese market. 

READ MORE


 
News you should know

Let’s do the numbers

  • Stocks were all over the place today but settled higher as traders anticipated Nvidia’s earnings report after the bell. The S&P 500 closed up 0.4% to break a four-day losing streak, the Dow rose 0.1% and the Nasdaq composite added 0.6%.

  • Nvidia delivered. The chipmaker fueling the artificial intelligence boom cleared high expectations, posting a 65% annual jump in profits last quarter.

  • The Labor Department announced it won’t release October jobs numbers at all after the government shutdown disrupted its monthly survey. The September report, however, will come out tomorrow. We kicked off today’s show with what to expect on Jobs Thursday.

  • The National Retail Federation forecast retailers will hire fewer than 365,000 workers for the holiday season, a 15-year low.

The Trump administration

  • Trump has used his inauguration, future presidential library, White House ballroom and a new super PAC to mount an unprecedented multi-billion-dollar fundraising effort in the past year. Ethics experts are alarmed, and they can’t even see all the money.

  • And about that Saudi investment forum: Trump said the kingdom pledged to invest $1 trillion in the U.S., and deals are in progress to sell fighter jets and AI chips to Saudi Arabia.

Your money

  • Reselling concert tickets above face value will soon be illegal in the U.K.

  • A new analysis found nearly 14 million Americans are so far behind on their utility bills that they’re in collections, or about to be.

  • Panera announced a turnaround plan after changes to stay competitive the past few years didn’t take. Oh, and the caffeinated lemonade lawsuits. 

  • Chances are at least one website or service you use was impacted by this week’s CloudFlare outage. Why does so much of the economy seemingly rest on just a few big companies?
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QUOTE OF THE DAY
"The expectation … was to pay a fee of around $200 per nurse for the H-1B visas, but the $100,000 we can't afford."
—  Jamie White, chief nursing officer at Frederick Health Hospital in rural Maryland

A relatively small number of H-1B visa recipients work in healthcare, but those that do overwhelmingly work in underserved communities. The Trump administration dramatically hiked the fee employers must pay to bring on international workers back in September, and rural hospitals are struggling to come up with the funds to staff up. 

Labubus on display
Jade Gao/AFP via Getty Images
Final note
What could possibly go wrong?

We’ve been intrigued by prediction markets for a while now. They predicted last year’s presidential election more decisively than the polls could, and they’re blurring the regulatory line between investing and gambling.

Now reselling platform StockX is partnering with prediction market Kalshi to let users bet on the secondary market for sneakers and Labubus. Bloomberg’s Matt Levine has a good explanation on hypebeast futures trading. Here’s a gift link.
Is money making things weird between you and your friends?
Our podcast "This is Uncomfortable" is starting an advice column, and we want to hear your questions about money arguments, splitting bills, friendly loans, anything! Don’t worry, we’ll keep your name private when we answer on the show!
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