CNBC host Jim Cramer has warned that a wave of bad loans will force Federal Reserve boss Jerome Powell to cut rates. According to Jim Cramer, this is a headache that is serious enough to box Powell into a corner and force the Fed out of its right grip on interest rates. He added that cutting rates fast might be the only way to stop this bleeding.
“Today got real ugly, but at least we finally have something that can make the Federal Reserve itchy to cut interest rates sooner rather than later: bank loans gone bad,” Jim said. “Nothing motivates the Fed to move faster than credit losses, because they’re a definitive sign that the economy is going south.”
Jim Cramer discusses interest rates amid a surge in bank losses
Several bank stocks registered a brutal sell-off as earnings season kicked off with beats across JPMorgan, BlackRock, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped by 0.7%, the S&P 500 plunged by 0.6%, and the Nasdaq Composite slipped by 0.5%, led by a brutal selloff in bank stocks, as shown by data from TradingView.
The sell pressure came after investors panicked over the health of regional banks’ lending businesses, which are suddenly looking way shakier than anyone expected. The biggest shocks came from two auto firms, Tricolor and First Brands, both of which filed for bankruptcy this week. After that, the dominoes started falling. Zions Bancorporation reported a $50 million loss tied to two commercial loans on Wednesday night, and by Thursday, Western Alliance was claiming a borrower had committed fraud.
The activities summed up a week packed with red flags, and as Jim Cramer put it, “the banking system has provided us with enough questionable credits in one week” to make Powell’s hand tremble over the rate-cut lever. Lower interest rates usually spark the economy back to life, but Jim reminded everyone that they also help borrowers avoid default, something the Fed can’t ignore right now. He’s convinced these credit cracks are the exact kind of pain that forces policymakers to act fast, no matter how threatening inflation becomes.
There have been echoes of fear and frustration across Wall Street, as investors are tired of watching the same credit risks reappear in new forms, especially in the private lending space. Those markets have been rising for years, and now that some of their loans are going sour, everyone’s realizing just how deep the rot might go. Jim also pointed to Jamie Dimon’s earlier warning that the bankruptcies in the auto sector were “like cockroaches – when you see one, there are probably more.” Dimon’s prediction aged fast.
The sudden collapse of First Brands has already set off questions about how such a small auto-parts supplier managed to entangle billions of dollars across global banking and fund-management firms. Jim Cramer says he’s not panicking. “Now, it’s possible there’s foul play involved in that multi-million problem of First Brands,” he said. “Doesn’t matter, though: a bad loan is a bad loan is a bad loan, and that’s good for the stock market because these bad loans won’t hurt profits of anything other than the banks. The pain will be contained, I think,” Jim Cramer added.



