Now we know.
Former Federal Reserve Governor Adriana Kugler abruptly resigned in August on a “personal matter” and returned to academia.
Her quick departure raised questions among economists and market watchers around the world.
Turns out she was facing an internal ethics investigation linked to alleged improper stock trades, according to a new government watchdog report.
And there’s more.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell refused to grant Kugler’s request for a waiver from the central bank’s beefed-up ethics rules, according to Bloomberg.
Kugler, a Biden appointee, joined the central bank in September 2023.
Prior to that position, she served as the U.S. Executive Director of the World Bank.
Kugler raised eyebrows when she missed the Federal Open Market Committee’s July 29-30 policy meeting.
More Federal Reserve:
She announced on Aug. 1 that she would resign effective Aug. 8, without citing a reason.
The Fed said then that her absence from the meeting was due to a “personal matter.”
The surprise resignation was a gift to President Donald Trump, who had been ratcheting up demands that the central bank drastically lower interest rates.
The Fed had been in a “wait-and-see” hold pending the impact of Trump’s tariffs and trade wars on inflation.
Trump appointed Stephen Miran, who took an unpaid leave of absence from his post as a White House economic adviser, to replace Kugler until Jan. 31.
Miran has voted repeatedly for rapid interest-rate cuts since joining the Fed in September.
Ahead of the July FOMC meeting, Kugler requested a waiver from Powell to conduct financial transactions, according to a Fed official.
Powell denied the request.
Related: Fed official sends strong signal on December interest-rate cut
It wasn’t immediately clear what that request involved, Bloomberg reported.
But according to the report from the U.S. Office of Government Ethics released Nov. 14, Kugler faced a probe by the Fed’s internal watchdog related to her recent financial disclosures before stepping down in August.
The report showed that Fed ethics officials declined to certify Kugler’s latest disclosures.
Kugler, a professor at McCourt School of Public Policy and Economics at Georgetown University, declined to comment.
In the financial disclosure released Nov. 14, Fed ethics official Sean Croston said, “Consistent with our standard practices and policies, matters related to this disclosure were referred earlier this year by the Board’s Ethics Office to the independent Office of Inspector General for the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.”