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Los Lobos files lawsuit against Sony Music for unpaid royalties from ‘La Bamba’ and ‘Desperado’

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East L.A. rock group Los Lobos have filed two lawsuits against Sony, claiming the band was underpaid royalties on the songs they recorded for the La Bamba and Desperado soundtracks.

Between them, the lawsuits ask for between $1.5 million and $2.75 million in compensation. They were filed in California state court late last year, and only came to light when one of the suits was transferred to a federal court on Friday (January 9).

That lawsuit names Sony Music Entertainment and its label Milan Entertainment as defendants, and centers on Canción del Mariachi, a song Los Lobos recorded for the 1995 Antonio Banderas film Desperado.

The song was used as the opening track for the movie, and appeared on both the Desperado soundtrack and in a 2004 compilation soundtrack of all the Mariachi movies, titled Mexico and the Mariachis, released by Milan Entertainment. Milan was acquired by Sony Masterworks in 2019. The song has been available via that soundtrack on streaming since 2018.

“Plaintiffs’ representatives have recently discovered that neither Sony, nor Milan, or any other Sony-related entity has ever accounted to Los Lobos for any digital streaming of the recording in any country, territory, or place, for any streaming, at any time, for any royalty period,” states the complaint, which can be read in full here.

“Neither Sony, nor Milan, or any other Sony-related entity has ever accounted to Los Lobos for any digital streaming of the recording in any country, territory, or place, for any streaming, at any time, for any royalty period.”

Los Lobos, in a complaint against Sony

This failure to account for the song’s streams became “even more egregious” in recent years when Canción del Mariachi gained new fans after UFC fighter Ilia “El Matador” Topuria began using it as his “walkout” song or “anthem,” the complaint states. It alleges Sony was aware of the song’s resurgent popularity, as it had the title changed to Canción del Mariachi (Ilia Topuria ‘El Matador’ Anthem).

Given that Los Lobos’ recording contract gave the band 24% of net revenue on the song, the band estimates they are owed between $500,000 and $750,000 for the more than 600 million streams the song has garnered. The complaint asks the court for a complete accounting of the royalties owed on the track.

It also states that Los Lobos have reason to believe the recording was licensed for use on television, for which the band never received royalties.

Sony Music declined to comment.

The other lawsuit names Sony Pictures Entertainment and Sony-owned Columbia Pictures as defendants, and alleges that members of Los Lobos – David Hidalgo, Louie Perez, Cesar Rosas, Conrad Lozano, and Steve Berlin – were never paid royalties for streams outside the US and Canada for their 1987 cover of La Bamba.

Los Lobos recorded the song for a biopic of rocker Ritchie Valens, also titled La Bamba. Valens died in 1959 in a plane crash in Iowa that also killed Buddy Holly and ‘Big Bopper’ J.P. Richardson. Valens had originally recorded La Bamba, which he had adapted from a Mexican folk song.

Los Lobos’ version of the song became an international hit, reaching No. 1 on the charts in 15 countries, according to the complaint as cited by Rolling Stone, and spent three weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Despite the song’s international success, “plaintiff’s representatives have recently discovered that no royalties for streaming exploitation of the recordings have ever been paid to Los Lobos for any country outside of the United States and Canada,” stated the complaint, as quoted by Billboard. The complaint describes that as a “massive deficiency.”

The complaint says Sony is responsible for the underpayment because it handles non-US and Canada royalty accounting for the La Bamba soundtrack. It estimates the back royalties owed run between $1 million and $2 million.

Los Lobos was formed in East Los Angeles in 1973 and came to prominence with La Bamba in 1987. They have recorded 17 studio albums, including most recently 2021’s Native Sons, and have been nominated for 12 Grammy awards, winning four.

 Music Business Worldwide

Shakur Stevenson predicts the victor of Dmitry Bivol vs David Benavidez match

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Shakur Stevenson has offered his prediction for a potential showdown between Dmitry Bivol and David Benavidez, branding it ‘one of the best fights in the sport of boxing.’

The two light-heavyweight world champions seem to be on different trajectories, with Benavidez teasing a move to cruiserweight and Bivol expected to make a mandatory title defence later this year.

Benavidez was the mandatory challenger to Bivol earlier last year, until the Russian’s decision to vacate his title saw the American get upgraded from interim to full WBC world champion.

This was because Bivol, following his monumental points victory over Artur Beterbiev – to claim the undisputed crown – in February 2025, had been forced to undergo back surgery.

But now, having reportedly made a full recovery, the 35-year-old is widely expected to face IBF mandatory challenger Michael Eifert in the coming months.

Benavidez, meanwhile, has done his very best to remain active, starting 2025 with a points victory against David Morrell before defending his WBC belt with a seventh-round finish over Anthony Yarde in November.

Since then, the 29-year-old has named unified cruiserweight champion Gilberto Ramirez as a likely opponent for him to face in May. He has confirmed that he will look to drop back down to 175lbs after and target both Bivol and Beterbiev.

WBC lightweight champion Stevenson has offered his take on the undisputed matchup, sharing his prediction in an interview with Cigar Talk.

“I think that Benavidez and Bivol is another fight that’s one of the biggest and best fights in the sport of boxing.

“I don’t know if it’s the biggest, but [it’s] one of the best. I’m leaning towards Bivol, but I know it will be tough with Benavidez, with his pressure [and] just his fighting style overall.

“I see it as Bivol being the winner, but it would be close.”

Bivol may look to make a trilogy fight with Beterbiev before facing Benavidez. In truth, any matchup between the three men will be welcomed by fans.

Julia’s Tiny House Provides Adaptable Layout for Family Residence and Remote Work

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Designed for full-time living in a small footprint, the Julia tiny house packs an impressive number of features into its compact frame. It includes a light-filled and airy interior with a netted hangout area, as well as a home office, and can even optionally run off-the-grid.

The Julia is designed by Sweden’s Vagabond Haven and is built on a steel frame with wheels. However, the wheels are just intended for minor on-site movements, not for towing on a public road, so this isn’t a good choice for would-be nomads. It has a length of 7.9 m (25.9 ft) and a width of 3 m (nearly 10 ft). This makes it on the larger side for a European model but it’s still relatively compact by North American standards, which can exceed double its length. The exterior is finished in spruce or engineered wood, and it’s topped with an aluminum roof.

The Julia tiny house features a large dining table, plus seating with integrated storage

Vagabond Haven

Inside, the Julia offers 27 sq m (290 sq ft) of living space and is finished in a choice of spruce or plywood, along with laminate flooring. Entry is through the kitchen, which occupies the center of the home. It’s equipped with a sink, a small fridge, an oven, and an electric cooktop, plus plywood countertops and plenty of cabinetry for storage.

Adjacent to the kitchen is the dining area. This is generous for a tiny house and includes some stools and bench seating, both with integrated storage, plus a large table. The bathroom is nearby. Reached by a sliding door, it contains a glass-enclosed shower, a flushing toilet, and a vanity sink. Elsewhere on the ground floor lies a small extra room that’s used here as a home office.

There are two bedrooms in the Julia. Since there’s no proper lounge in the home, the ground floor bedroom can be used as a daybed and there’s lots of glazing in there, helping fill it with natural light. Above this, and accessed by a rope ladder, is the netted loft mentioned, providing another hangout spot.

Over on the other side of the tiny house, above the bathroom, lies the upstairs bedroom. It’s a typical loft model with a low ceiling and a double bed installed.

The Julia tiny house's downstairs bedroom has generous glazing, helping fill the interior with natural light
The Julia tiny house’s downstairs bedroom has generous glazing, helping fill the interior with natural light

Vagabond Haven

The Julia starts at just €36,595 (roughly US$42,700). This model is available with lots of options, including furniture, appliances, skylights, and a fully off-grid setup with solar panels and rainwater harvesting system.

Source: Vagabond Haven

Poland’s Former Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro Granted Asylum in Hungary

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Adam EastonBBC News Warsaw correspondent

Reuters Zbigniew Ziobro wearing a blue coat, light blue shirt and burgundy tie, points with the raised index finger of his left hand Reuters

Zbigniew Ziobro says he is a victim of political persecution

Hungary has granted political asylum to Poland’s former Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro who is facing charges of embezzlement.

Ziobro is facing 26 charges related to embezzling money from a fund meant to be spent on crime victims and rehabilitating criminals.

Instead, he is accused of authorising the purchase of spyware that was allegedly used to hack political opponents’ phones. He says he is a victim of political persecution.

Granting asylum to a citizen of a fellow EU member state goes against the spirit of EU standards.

But in the case of Hungary it is neither new nor surprising.

Ziobro is the second politician of the former Law and Justice-led government to be granted this status – last year it was his former deputy Marcin Romanowski who fled to Budapest to seek protection.

Both are accused of corruption and misusing their power – most notably by using the money of the state-controlled Justice Fund which was under their oversight in order to fund their party and its cronies.

Ziobro was justice minister between 2015 and 2023 under the previous right-wing PiS-led government, which is politically aligned to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.

If found guilty he could face up to 25 years in prison.

Writing on X, Ziobro said: “I have decided to accept the asylum granted to me by the government of Hungary due to the political persecution in Poland.”

“I have chosen to fight against political banditry and lawlessness. I stand in opposition to a creeping dictatorship,” Ziobro added, accusing Prime Minister Donald Tusk of waging a “vendetta” against him.

Ziobro is accused of authorising a 25m zloty ($7m; £5.15m) purchase of Israeli-made Pegasus spyware, which Poland’s current coalition government and a European Parliament investigative team found was used to secretly hack the phones of political opponents.

Current Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said his phone was hacked and Tusk said his wife’s and daughter’s phones were also hacked.

Ziobro is also accused of awarding Justice Fund grants to fire stations and women’s associations without proper competition to bolster support for the government.

As minister of justice from 2015 to 2023, Ziobro was the author of judiciary reforms which provoked a major conflict with Brussels.

The issue led to a freeze of EU money for Poland as well as to verdicts of the European Court of Justice, which deemed them as violating fundamental EU rules and standards including the principle of judicial independence.

Orban, who faced similar criticism, and the PiS rejected and ignored those rulings, saying they violated Poland’s sovereignty and constituted an overreach of Brussels’s powers.

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Israel Continues Demolishing Gaza Two Months After Cease-Fire

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More than two months ago, Israel and Hamas signed a cease-fire agreement that offered Palestinians in Gaza a hope of respite after a punishing two-year Israeli bombardment that left much of their enclave in ruins.

The destruction has continued.

Israel has demolished more than 2,500 buildings in Gaza since the cease-fire began, according to a New York Times analysis of satellite imagery from Planet Labs. It says it is destroying tunnels and booby-trapped homes.

This is what Israel’s actions look like. A nighttime video from Oct. 30, when the cease-fire was in effect, shows what appears to be a large-scale controlled demolition in a part of Shejaiya, a neighborhood in Gaza City, that is under Israeli military control.

As part of the cease-fire agreement reached earlier that month, the Israeli military withdrew its forces beyond an agreed-upon boundary inside Gaza, represented on maps published by Israel as a yellow line. That left Israel in control of about half of the enclave.

Most of the demolitions since the cease-fire began have been in those Israeli-controlled areas.

But dozens of buildings have been destroyed beyond the yellow line in areas effectively under Hamas control, where the Israeli military had agreed to halt its operations.

In satellite images taken shortly after the truce, clusters of intact buildings can be seen in the Shejaiya neighborhood, which spans the yellow line. Shots of the same area months later show that it has largely been reduced to wasteland. And scores of buildings, the images show, were destroyed beyond the yellow line, in some cases as far as 900 feet over.

Sources: Satellite images by Planet Labs; Israeli military (yellow line as depicted in maps published online)

Many of the structures were likely to have already been severely damaged after two years of Israeli bombardment. A United Nations assessment found that, as of Oct. 11, more than 80 percent of Gaza’s structures were damaged or destroyed. The people who lived in them are believed to have been displaced by successive evacuation orders and raging fighting.

Israeli officials say the widespread demolitions are happening as part of efforts to “demilitarize” Gaza. Since the cease-fire, they say the military has destroyed underground tunnels that were once used by militant groups, and has leveled buildings that were booby-trapped.

At the height of the war, which began after Hamas attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, the Israelis estimated that the tunnel network spanned hundreds of miles, with thousands of entrances. Hamas has used the tunnels to store weapons, hide hostages and stage ambushes of Israeli soldiers.

Many Palestinians in Gaza argue that Israel has been flattening entire neighborhoods, with little regard for those who once lived or owned property there. Given the extent of the tunnel network, they say they fear that if Israel tries to dismantle it all, many more of the remaining structures in the territory could be imperiled.

Niveen Nofal, 35, who lived in Shejaiya before being forced to move, said she felt a deep sense of loss to learn that Israel was leveling her neighborhood. “Our hopes and dreams have been turned into mounds of rubble,” she said.

The scale of ongoing destruction is stark. Across eastern Gaza, in areas under Israeli control, satellite imagery reveals that entire blocks have been erased since the cease-fire, as well as swaths of farmland and agricultural greenhouses.

Source: Satellite images by Planet Labs

“Israel is wiping entire areas off the map,” said Mohammed al-Astal, a political analyst based in Gaza. “The Israeli military is destroying everything in front of it — homes, schools, factories and streets. There’s no security justification for what it’s doing.”

An Israeli military official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity under military rules, said Israel was not indiscriminately knocking down buildings. He said they sometimes collapsed when Israeli soldiers detonated explosives in the tunnels beneath them.

The official acknowledged that the military was carrying out demolitions on both sides of the yellow line, but said that Israeli ground forces had not crossed the line to do so. The Times was unable to verify that claim.

He also said that the Air Force was striking structures that posed a threat to Israeli soldiers, and that some of these were adjacent to the yellow line. Some tunnels, he said, traverse the withdrawal line, so detonating them could cause buildings on either side of it to collapse.

President Trump’s 20-point plan for ending the Gaza war, which formed the basis for the cease-fire, said that “all military, terror, and offensive infrastructure, including tunnels and weapons production facilities, will be destroyed.” But Israel and Hamas also agreed to suspend “all military operations, including aerial and artillery bombardment.”

One former Israeli military official questioned the scope of the demolition.

“This is absolute destruction,” said Shaul Arieli, who commanded forces in Gaza in the 1990s. “It’s not selective destruction, it’s everything.”

Classified maps from the Israeli military intelligence directorate show an expansive tunnel network in the Shejaiya area and scores of locations where the military believes militants have booby-trapped homes and roads.

The Israeli military allowed The Times to view those maps, which it said were produced for soldiers deployed in Gaza. The Times could not independently verify the accuracy of the maps.

Husam Badran, a senior Hamas official in Qatar, said the Israeli demolitions were violating the cease-fire agreement.

“The agreement isn’t vague, it’s clear,” he said in an interview. “Destroying people’s homes and property isn’t allowed. They’re hostile actions.”

Israeli officials have said that the military will continue carrying out the demolitions “until the last tunnel,” as the defense minister, Israel Katz, put it in a post on social media in November. “If there are no tunnels,” Mr. Katz wrote,” there is no Hamas.”

Ashraf Nasr, 32, who lived in Shejaiya before being displaced, said he was filled with sadness to see his hometown pulverized.

“Our memories have been erased,” he said. “But Hamas gave Israel the pretext to carry out this disaster. It militarized civilian spaces.”

Abercrombie & Fitch lowers annual sales growth forecast

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Abercrombie & Fitch tempers annual sales growth forecast 

After clashes, Syrians in Kurdish areas of Aleppo begin rebuilding | Updates on Syria’s War

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Residents of a Kurdish neighbourhood in Syria’s second-largest city, Aleppo, have passed through government checkpoints to find blackened walls, burned-out vehicles and debris-strewn streets.

They returned home on Sunday after days of deadly clashes.

The fighting, which erupted in Kurdish-majority neighbourhoods on Tuesday after the government and the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), the main Kurdish-led force in the country, failed to make progress on plans to integrate the SDF into the national army, killed dozens of people and displaced some 155,000, according to Syrian authorities.

The battles were the most intense since the fall of then-President Bashar al-Assad in December 2024.

By Sunday, the government had taken full control of the two areas, having agreed to transfer SDF fighters from the districts to Kurdish autonomous regions in the country’s northeast.

The United Nations said it was trying to send more convoys to the neighbourhoods with food, fuel, blankets and other urgently needed supplies.

Investors Dump U.S. Assets Amid Fears of End of Fed Independence

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Whoever replaces Jerome Powell as chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve in May knows one thing: If they don’t do what President Trump wants, they risk being criminally prosecuted. That was the unambiguous message in Powell’s extraordinary statement yesterday, in which he vowed to continue to set monetary policy independently regardless of the federal grand jury subpoenas investigating his statements to Congress about alleged cost overruns in the renovation of the Fed’s HQ building. 

“This new threat is not about my testimony last June or about the renovation of the Federal Reserve buildings. … Those are pretexts. The threat of criminal charges is a consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the President,” he said.

“This is about whether the Fed will be able to continue to set interest rates based on evidence and economic conditions—or whether instead monetary policy will be directed by political pressure or intimidation.”

Markets moved back into “Sell America” mode overnight as traders digested the prospect of an incoming Fed chair who lacks independent credibility: The dollar sank 0.32% against a basket of international currencies; the yield on 5-year Treasuries moved sharply up, a sign that investors now regard U.S. government bonds as being suddenly more risky; gold futures—the traditional safe haven—rose 2.21% today to hit a new record high over $4,600 per troy ounce; and S&P 500 futures are down 0.66% this morning prior to the opening bell.

Wall Street analysts are almost universally negative about the news.

“The combined drop in the dollar, equities and Treasuries was a reminiscence of the ‘sell America’ days of last spring,” ING’s Francesco Pesole told clients this morning. “The downside risks for the dollar from any indications of further determination to interfere with the Fed’s independence are substantial. Again, the bond market will be the most important barometer, both on the short end of the curve if markets price back in more rate cuts, or in the long end with potential stress signs on independence risks. A sharp steepening of the curve could take the dollar on a fall.”

At Invesco Asset Management, analyst David Chao told Bloomberg, “The Fed subpoena is another example of how US assets are becoming less attractive … Not only is the US retrenching behind its Fortress America borders, the country is also becoming more predatory.”

The subpoenas may also trigger a burst of inflation, according to RBC Capital Markets’ Blake Gwinn. “Markets will start to price in greater inflation expectations, inflation risk premium, and term premium if the Fed’s independence comes under further attack,” he told the Financial Times. “We don’t appear to have hit it yet, but every action is another step closer to it.”

Counterintuitively, some analysts think that the investigation now makes near-term interest rate cuts less likely, because Powell and the other members of the Federal Open Markets Committee will be determined to show the markets that they are guided by the data and not legal threats.

“The move may also help Fed independence,” UBS’s Paul Donovan said in an email. “Powell’s defiance might signal a reluctance to quit as a Fed governor this year. There are signs the Senate may delay confirming the nomination of a new Fed Chair. Concerns about market reactions and perceptions of institutional independence (in the wake of legal challenges) may become hawkish considerations in setting interest rates.”

ING’s Pesole said, “Markets aren’t ready to price in a loss of Fed independence just yet, either on the view that Powell will indeed remain firm in his policy views (as he’s pledged to), the FOMC won’t be heavily affected, or that the DoJ subpoenas aren’t likely to lead to an indictment.”

Either way, there’s a real sense of uncertainty among asset managers right now. “The Fed as we have understood it as an institution over the past couple of decades is fading from view. It’s operating in a different environment,” ANZ’s chief economist, Richard Yetsenga, told the FT.

Here’s a snapshot of the markets ahead of the opening bell in New York this morning:

  • S&P 500 futures were down 0.66% this morning. The last session closed up 0.65%.
  • STOXX Europe 600 was down 0.1% in early trading. 
  • The U.K.’s FTSE 100 was flat in early trading. 
  • Japan’s Nikkei 225 was closed today.
  • China’s CSI 300 was up 0.65%. 
  • The South Korea KOSPI was up 0.84%.
  • India’s NIFTY 50 was up 0.42% 
  • Bitcoin was at $90.4K.
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Jerome Powell, Chair of US Federal Reserve, Faces Criminal Investigation

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Federal prosecutors have opened a criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, he said on Sunday.

In a video announcing the probe, Powell said the US justice department served the agency with subpoenas and threatened a criminal indictment over testimony he gave to a Senate committee about renovations to Federal Reserve buildings.

He called the probe “unprecedented” and said he believed it was opened due to him drawing Donald Trump’s ire over refusing to lower interest rates despite repeated public pressure from the president.

The Fed chair is the latest to come at odds with Trump and then face criminal investigation by the US justice department.

The BBC has contacted the justice department and the White House for comment.

“This is about whether the Fed will be able to continue to set interest rates based on evidence and economic conditions, or whether instead monetary policy will be directed by political pressure or intimidation,” Powell said.

“I have deep respect for the rule of law and for accountability in our democracy. No one, certainly not the chair of the Federal Reserve is above the law, but this unprecedented action should be seen in the broader context of the administration’s threats and ongoing pressure,” he went on to say.

Trump said in an interview with NBC News on Sunday that he did not have any knowledge of the Justice Department’s investigation into the Fed.

“I don’t know anything about it, but he’s certainly not very good at the Fed, and he’s not very good at building buildings,” he said of Powell.

The Fed is undertaking the first renovation of two buildings, the Eccles and 1951 Constitution Avenue buildings, since their construction in the 1930s.

The “overhaul and modernisation” of the buildings includes health and safety work such as the removal of asbestos and lead contamination.

The Fed has said that the renovations will reduce its costs over time. But Trump has criticised the ballooning costs of the project, arguing it will cost $3.1bn (£2.3bn), much higher than the Fed’s $2.5bn (£1.9bn) forecast.

The probe, which prosecutors have not confirmed, would signal a fresh escalation in Trump’s ongoing dispute with Powell, who the president nominated for the role as Fed chair in 2017.

It comes as the president is expected to name Powell’s successor as chair by the end of the month.

Trump has repeatedly threatened to remove Powell, who he has criticised for not cutting interest rates as quickly as the president would have liked. In the second half of 2025, the Fed cut interest rates three times.

The president has consistently blamed his predecessor, Joe Biden, and interest rates for inflation and costs in the US.

Critics have raised concerns that Trump’s pressure to oust the Fed chair would muddy the institution’s authority to set interest rates independently from presidents.

North Carolina Senator Thom Tillis, a Republican who is a member of the Senate Banking Committee, said he would oppose the nomination of Powell’s replacement by Trump, and any other Fed Board nominee, “until this legal matter is fully resolved”.

“If there were any remaining doubt whether advisers within the Trump Administration are actively pushing to end the independence of the Federal Reserve, there should now be none,” Tillis said in a statement.

“It is now the independence and credibility of the Department of Justice that are in question,” the senator said.

Senator Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat, said she believed Trump’s plan was to push Powell off the Fed board for good and “install another sock puppet to complete his corrupt takeover of America’s central bank”.

“This committee and the Senate should not move forward with any Trump nominee for the Fed, including Fed Chair,” she said.

Powell’s investigation will be overseen by the US Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia, according to the New York Times, which first reported the probe.

April Larusse, head of investment specialists at Insight Investment, told the BBC’s Today programme that “it really isn’t the case that the Federal Reserve has been doing nothing on interest rates so this does feel like perhaps it is pressure that isn’t really justified”.

She added that Trump wants lower rates as “he is definitely trying to make sure that all parts of the economy benefit”.

“For people at the lower end of the income spectrum things have been difficult – inflation was very high, wages were not keeping up with inflation – and so there is a big part of the US population that frankly is still suffering with a cost of living crisis.”

The criminal probe into Powell, together with news of continued unrest in Iran, sparked a jump in the price of precious metals.

The price of gold – which is often seen a safer asset in times of uncertainty – was up 1.4% at $4,572.36 per ounce on Monday, having hit a record high of $4,600.33 earlier.

Silver also hit a record high – of $84.58 an ounce – before slipping back to $83.26 per ounce, a rise of 5.4% for the day.

Trump previously took aim at Lisa Cook, a governor at the US central bank, whom he tried to fire over alleged mortgage fraud.

The case was blocked by a US federal court and will be heard by the Supreme Court later this month.

Criminal charges brought by Trump’s justice department against political adversaries like New York Attorney General Letitia James, who brought a civil fraud case against Trump in 2024, and ex-Federal Bureau of Investigation boss James Comey were also dismissed by a court.

Comey was accused of making false statements and obstructing justice. He was fired by Trump during his first term after leading a probe into Russian interference in the 2016 US presidential election, which Trump won over Hillary Clinton.

Both Comey and James have maintained their innocence and said the prosecutions were politically charged.