WSJ What’s News - Iran-Israel Cease-Fire Appears to Hold After Trump Scolding
Episode Date: June 24, 2025P.M. Edition for June 24. Israel says its airports were returning to full activity and it was lifting restrictions on civilian movements, after President Trump responded angrily to earlier exchanges o...f fire aft er the U.S.-brokered truce went into effect. Plus, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell reaffirms his wait-and-see posture on rate cuts. WSJ chief economics correspondent Nick Timiraos discusses the role that a rift within the central bank could play in its next moves. And a bill passed by the Senate last week opens the door to stablecoins being used in consumer payments. We hear from the co-host of WSJ’s Take on the Week podcast and Heard on the Street writer Telis Demos about whether they might become an alternative to credit cards. Alex Ossola hosts. Sign up for the WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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to obtain a prospectus containing this and other information. Read it carefully The ceasefire between Iran and Israel appears to hold after President Trump scolds the two
nations.
Plus, Fed Chair Jerome Powell reaffirms his wait-and-see posture on rate cuts.
He leaned against the idea that the Fed would cut interest rates at their next meeting at
the end of July, but he kept the door open to cutting rates after that.
And why a stablecoin may turn into your next credit card.
It's Tuesday, June 24th.
I'm Alex Osela for The Wall Street Journal.
This is the PM edition of What's News,
the top headlines and business stories
that move the world today.
President Trump responded with anger
when there was continued fire between Israel and Iran
after a US brokered ceasefire went into effect.
You know what?
We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long and so hard that they
don't know what the fuck they're doing.
Do you understand that?
But in subsequent hours, there were initial signs that the ceasefire might be holding.
Israel said it was lifting nearly all wartime restrictions on civilian movement and economic
activity and the Israeli
airport authorities said Ben Gurion and Haifa airports are returning to full activity.
Israel said it had achieved its war aims, having removed a dual existential threat
from Iran's nuclear and ballistic missile programs. Iran's foreign minister had said
his country would stop its attacks as long as Israel did.
his country would stop its attacks as long as Israel did. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell was in front of Congress today for regularly scheduled
testimony on monetary policy.
When asked, Powell declined to endorse the view that tariffs will lead to only muted
price pressures and that the Fed shouldn't delay rate cuts much longer, a stance made
most prominently by his colleague Christopher Waller in the past few weeks.
I will say this.
I think many paths are possible here and certainly the one you mentioned is a possible one.
We could see inflation come in not as strong as we expect.
And if that were the case, that would tend to suggest cutting sooner.
We could see the labor market weakening and that would also suggest cutting sooner, we could see the labor market weakening. And that would also suggest cutting sooner.
On the other hand, if we see inflation coming in higher
or if the labor market were to remain strong,
then we would probably be moving later.
So I think a range of possible paths are possible.
And certainly the one you mentioned is one of them.
I'm joined now by WSJ chief economics correspondent, Nick
Timmeros.
Nick, it seems like Powell is not committing either way
to cutting rates or not cutting rates.
He's under a huge amount of pressure
from President Trump to cut them.
How is he navigating all of this?
In the hearing today, he really did keep his options open.
So he leaned against the idea that the Fed would cut interest
rates at their next meeting at the end of July. But he kept the door open to cutting rates after that. And I should add, he didn't
explicitly rule out doing anything in July. What he said was, they think inflation is
going to go up a little bit here because of tariffs. If it doesn't, then they could cut
sooner. Alternately, if the layer market ends up getting weaker than they currently see
it, they could
cut.
As we mentioned, Powell is feeling the pressure from within the Fed as some officials want
to resume rate cuts sooner.
How significant is that rift within the central bank?
So let's step back.
Last Wednesday, the Fed had a meeting where they unanimously agreed to keep interest rates
steady, but they produced new quarterly projections
at that meeting that showed a pretty significant split.
There were seven officials who projected no interest rate cuts this year, and then there
were 10 who said they thought there could be multiple.
Then on Friday and on Monday, we heard from two Fed officials, both of whom were appointed to
their jobs by Donald Trump, saying they thought the Fed could cut interest rates at the very
next meeting.
Now, Powell's testimony today suggests that those two officials are maybe on their own,
that that may be more of an outlier view, even among the people who are more open to
cutting interest rates.
So you have a lot going on right now because the outlook is very uncertain and officials
are starting to chafe a little bit against the idea of waiting much longer to see how
this plays out.
That was WSJ Chief Economics correspondent, Nick Timuros.
Thanks Nick.
Thanks so much. The Dow Jones Index
Stocks rallied today on news that the ceasefire between Iran and Israel appears to be taking
hold.
All three major U.S. indexes were up.
The S&P 500 rose about 1.1 percent, the Dow added roughly 1.2 percent, and the Nasdaq
closed about 1.4 percent higher.
The Dow Jones Index and the Nasdaq closed about 1.4% higher. U.S. Home Prices Rose in April at the slowest annual pace in nearly two years.
The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller National Home Price Index, which measures home prices across
the country, rose 2.7% since April last year.
Mortgage rates around 6% are keeping monthly payments high, pricing out buyers
and cooling previously overheated housing markets.
And U.S. consumer confidence slipped in June, reversing an improvement in May. The Conference
Board's monthly survey showed its consumer confidence index falling to 93 from 98.4 last
month. The survey's closely watched labor market indicator also fell, and consumers turned
more pessimistic about future business conditions.
Coming up, how stable coins may become a threat to the consumer payments industry.
That's after the break.
Americans love using their credit cards, the most secure and hassle-free way to pay.
But D.C. politicians want to change that with the Durbin Marshall credit card bill.
This bill lets corporate megastores pick how your credit card is processed, allowing them
to use untested payment networks that jeopardize your data security and rewards.
Corporate megastores will make more money and you pay the price.
Tell Congress to Guard Your Card because Americans lose when politicians choose. Learn more at GuardYourCard.com. Last week, the Senate passed a bill to regulate stablecoins, digital tokens meant to represent
a fixed amount of fiat currency such as the U.S. dollar.
Now investors seem to be betting that stablecoins could represent a threat to the existing consumer
payment industry.
Following the bill's passage, shares of crypto companies such as Circle and Coinbase
surged, while shares of Visa and Mastercard are on track for their worst monthly performance
in a couple of years.
But the quickest path for stablecoins to make it into consumers' wallets may be working
with those existing players.
Telus Demos, host of WSJ's Take on the Week podcast and heard on the street writer,
is here with more.
So tell us, who are stablecoins particularly appealing for?
A stablecoin is basically a way to have a US dollar without actually having a US dollar
in your hand.
For somebody who wants US dollars but doesn't have access readily to
be able to hold them, a stablecoin is a fantastic way to do that because it represents a tokenized
version of a dollar and you can have it anywhere. I understand why merchants would want to find a way
to use stablecoins because it means they don't have to pay for credit card fees, but what
advantages do they offer for consumers?
If you're a consumer who, again, doesn't really have ready access to US dollars,
then you would not only want to hold stable coins, but then also pay with them.
For the rest of us, though, for people who do have dollars and cards
that run with dollars and things like that, it's an interesting question of what,
why you'd want to pay with a stablecoin instead of paying from your bank account. Maybe you hold a lot
of your money in stablecoins and you want to spend from that. And so you can then essentially
pay from your crypto wallet to anybody who takes credit cards and essentially pay with
the coins that are in your crypto wallet.
Does that eventually spell the end for credit card networks because people will be moving money through blockchains?
It's not really clear to me at least and I'm open to hearing more about why people want to pay directly with stable coins.
Whether or not they want to do a crypto payment directly, which means essentially that you're using a blockchain network, whether that's Coinbase's base network or Ethereum or Solana, one of the many
kind of blockchain networks out there. You can do it that way or you can use
some other method, you know, an intermediary like a credit card network
that can essentially do the same thing but just using that card network to
move that token around rather than using the blockchain directly.
That was co-host of WSJ's Take on the Week podcast and Heard on the Street writer, Talos
Deimos.
Thanks, Talos.
Thanks for having me.
One of the richest men in the world has spent the past few months personally headhunting
top AI talent.
Mark Zuckerberg has fired off emails and WhatsApp messages to hundreds of AI researchers and engineers,
offering them hundreds of millions of dollars to join a new super intelligence lab.
Tech reporter Megan Bobrowski told our tech news briefing podcast why Zuckerberg got so personally involved.
That shows how important this is to him, right? Like how existential AI is to the company,
at least in Mark Zuckerberg's eyes.
He views this as one of the most important things
that his company needs to be focusing on right now.
And so he wants to have the top talent
who can get him there,
who can get Meta to be one of the biggest,
best players in the space.
And the way that he's trying to do that
is by offering people $100 million pay packages
and personally reaching out to them himself.
To hear more from Megan,
listen to tomorrow's episode of Tech News Briefing.
And finally, corporate America's diversity,
equity and inclusion efforts are going incognito,
recognizing that flaunting such initiatives
may attract unwanted scrutiny from the Trump administration,
courts or influential activists,
companies are finding ways to keep their DEI strategies
under the radar.
WSJ columnist Callum Borchers
writes about work, life and career.
And he told our Your Money Briefing podcast,
how these companies do it.
Some of the common steps that companies are taking
are just tinkering with the DEI acronym itself
or scrapping it altogether.
For example, I met recently a former DEI chief
who is now called Chief Impact and Inclusion Officer.
So you see businesses that are trying
to keep that inclusion element,
tying it explicitly to the business impact
and trying to signal to potential critics,
hey, we're doing this for bottom line reasons.
You've also seen companies that have disbanded
their DEI departments keep many of the same components
and they'll just call them employee engagement efforts
or something a little bit blander like that.
And another strategy is partnering with a third party
when you're hiring.
So for example, there's a nonprofit called 110
that matches employers with people who don't have four yearyear college degrees but do have the right skills for the
job. And the group's CEO pointed out to me that people of color are disproportionately
large shares of the non-college educated job seekers. So that's one way that businesses
can indirectly access a diverse applicant pool without explicitly saying that's their
goal. To hear more from Callum, listen to today's episode of Your Money Briefing.
And that's what's news for this Tuesday afternoon. Additional audio in this episode,
courtesy of Reuters. Today's show is produced by Anthony Bansi with supervising producer
Michael Kosmides. Additional support by Coleman Standifer. I'm Alex Osala for The Wall Street
Journal. We'll be back with a new show tomorrow morning. Thanks for listening.