Kevin Warsh's first FOMC meeting as chair will keep rates unchanged but could redefine how the Fed communicates its next move.
Kevin Warsh's first FOMC meeting as chair will keep rates unchanged but could redefine how the Fed communicates its next move.

The Federal Reserve is expected to hold its benchmark rate at 3.50% to 3.75% when its two-day meeting concludes Wednesday, but Chair Kevin Warsh's debut may prove more consequential for how the central bank signals future policy.
"Warsh has been clear that he views detailed forward guidance as a constraint that limits the Fed's flexibility, so the question is whether he begins unwinding that framework at this meeting or waits," said Derek Tang, an economist at MPA Macro.
CME FedWatch data shows a 98.2% probability of no rate change. Markets are split on whether a hike could materialize later in 2026, with September seen as the earliest possible date for a move. The decision comes as May's consumer price index rose 4.2% year-over-year, while producer prices surged 6.5% — the fastest pace in more than a year. Core CPI, which excludes food and energy, stood at 2.9%, closer to the Fed's 2% target.
The stakes for Warsh extend beyond the rate decision. His approach to Fed communications — particularly whether he scales back the detailed economic projections and forward guidance that have become standard under predecessors Jerome Powell and Janet Yellen — will shape market expectations for the remainder of 2026. The next FOMC meeting is scheduled for July 28-29.
A Shift in How the Fed Talks
Warsh has long argued that detailed forward guidance creates commitments that limit a central bank's ability to respond to changing conditions. During his Senate confirmation testimony and subsequent speeches, he signaled a preference for less prescriptive language about the future path of rates. The FOMC currently publishes quarterly economic projections — the so-called dot plot — at every other meeting, with the June gathering being one such occasion. Warsh also holds press conferences after each meeting, a practice introduced by Powell.
Any changes are unlikely to take effect immediately. Warsh needs buy-in from the 12 voting members of the Federal Open Market Committee, and the shift may be gradual. But the June statement and his press conference will offer the first concrete evidence of how he intends to reshape the Fed's communications apparatus. The last time the Fed significantly altered its forward guidance framework was in 2012, when it began tying rate expectations to specific economic thresholds — a move that preceded years of ultra-loose policy.
Inflation, Politics and the Path Ahead
The inflation backdrop complicates Warsh's debut. The 4.2% headline CPI reading is driven largely by energy costs tied to the US-Iran conflict, a supply shock that the Fed may be tempted to look through — the same approach it took in 2021, when it labeled inflation "transitory" and was later forced into an aggressive tightening cycle. Core inflation at 2.9% gives the Fed some room to wait, but the 6.5% PPI reading suggests pipeline pressures that could feed into consumer prices in coming months.
The political environment adds another layer. The Trump administration has pushed for lower rates while simultaneously pursuing legal action against former Chair Powell and Fed Governor Lisa Cook. The Justice Department dropped its criminal investigation of Powell in April, and the Supreme Court is expected to rule within weeks on Trump's attempt to fire Cook. If Cook remains on the board, she prevents Trump from filling her seat with a more accommodative nominee. Powell has also chosen to stay on the FOMC as a governor despite losing the chairmanship, further limiting Trump's appointment power.
Overnight index swap markets currently price a roughly 35% probability of a rate hike by December, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. A hawkish hold — one that removes any reference to near-term cuts and opens the door to tightening — would push that probability higher. A more neutral tone would leave markets pricing the status quo.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.