Market Review – Plain TalkE-mini S&P 500 FuturesCME_MINI:ES1!FineMeiToday in Jackson Hole, Powell stepped off the stage with a speech that felt like walking a tightrope. On one side, he’s trying to keep a conservative line, while on the other, Trump is applying relentless pressure to cut rates by 25 basis points, not hesitating to call him a stubborn mule and an idiot. Despite disappointing GDP growth and mounting fears of a slowdown, the market keeps racing upward as if everything is perfectly fine. The Buffett Indicator is soaring at 209%, showing valuations are sky-high, yet investors seem blind to the warning signs. Meanwhile, Trump appointed Stephen Moore, a close ally and provocative figure, to the board, signaling how deeply politics is now woven into Fed decisions. Powell finds himself surrounded by landmines. Trump is hammering him nonstop to slash rates, senior Fed officials are openly rebelling against policy decisions, employment data is starting to weaken, and the producer price index suggests Trump’s tariffs will spill over onto consumers and ignite inflation. And yet, for now, markets act like nothing’s wrong, pricing in gains and ignoring cracks in the real economy. In my personal view, two scenarios lie ahead. If Powell gives in and cuts rates, markets will celebrate with another leg higher, but it will be a short-lived party that risks fueling inflation and eventually forcing the Fed into harsher tightening later. If instead Powell digs in and refuses to move, markets may take offense, selling off sharply and correcting valuations back to reality. Either way, the gap between Wall Street optimism and Main Street fundamentals is widening, and sooner or later, that gap will have to close — the only question is how painful the landing will be.