Key Takeaways:
- Fed Chair Warsh pushes trimmed-mean PCE as policy anchor over core PCE
- April trimmed-mean PCE reads 2.3% vs core PCE at 3.3%, a 1-point gap
- Critics warn of 48bps systematic underestimation, echoing 2021's inflation miss
Key Takeaways:

Fed Chair Kevin Warsh is pushing to re-anchor US monetary policy around an alternative inflation gauge that shows prices rising at less than half the pace of the Fed's traditional target — a shift critics say risks repeating the central bank's 2021 underestimation of inflation.
The April Personal Consumption Expenditures data published last week crystallized the divide. Core PCE, which excludes food and energy, rose 3.3% from a year earlier, its fastest pace since 2023. The Dallas Fed's trimmed-mean PCE — which strips out the largest and smallest price movements each month — registered just 2.3%. The 1-percentage-point gap is the widest since the pandemic-era inflation surge.
"The data we use to assess current inflation is quite incomplete," Warsh said during his April Senate confirmation hearing, arguing the Fed should place greater weight on trimmed-mean measures. He described core PCE as a "rough swag" that retains too many one-off price distortions from tariffs, geopolitical shocks and volatile categories such as beef prices.
The divergence carries direct implications for the rate path. The fed funds rate stands at 4.25% to 4.5%, unchanged since the 25-basis-point cut in September 2025. OIS markets currently price roughly two additional quarter-point cuts by year-end. If Warsh successfully shifts the policy anchor toward the trimmed-mean reading, the case for near-term easing strengthens considerably — a 2.3% inflation print sits much closer to the Fed's 2% target than the 3.3% core reading does.
The 48-Basis-Point Blind Spot
Yet a growing number of economists warn the trimmed-mean gauge may be systematically understating price pressures. Nomura estimates the current methodology introduces a downward bias of roughly 48 basis points, meaning true underlying inflation is closer to 2.8%. The distortion stems from the Dallas Fed's asymmetric trimming approach: it excludes the top 31% of price changes each month but only the bottom 24%, a design calibrated for an era when price declines were more common than surges.
That pattern reversed during the pandemic, and it has re-emerged under the Trump administration's tariff regime. Dallas Fed economist Tyler Atkinson cautioned against reading too much optimism into the current trimmed-mean level, noting that tariffs have pushed price increases across a broader range of goods, causing the trimming mechanism to exclude more high-inflation items than intended.
Employ America's alternative measure — a symmetric trimmed-mean that removes equal proportions from both tails — registered 3% in April. Its measure excluding housing and imputed prices hit 2.8% and has risen for 13 consecutive months.
Fed Governor Lisa Cook offered a counterpoint to Warsh's preferred framing, warning that core inflation is "moving in the wrong direction" and that the central bank cannot afford to dismiss the headline data.
Credibility vs. Convenience
The deeper question is whether the trimmed-mean pivot represents a principled framework change or a convenient rationale for easier policy. Warsh's own definition of price stability suggests the bar may be higher than any single metric. "I believe that price stability should be a change in prices such that no one's talking about it," he told the Senate Banking Committee — an 18-word statement that implies victory over inflation requires shifting public perception, not just hitting a statistical target.
Former Fed economist Riccardo Trezzi, now head of inflation research firm Trezzi & Co., said the risk is that "look-through" language becomes a tool to dismiss inconvenient data. "The issue is whether the Fed will consistently use a policy framework that regards price shocks as temporary factors and chooses not to respond, or whether it will use it as a way to ignore uncomfortable inflation data," he said.
The last time the Fed treated price pressures as transitory was in 2021, when the trimmed-mean PCE showed relatively mild inflation even as core measures surged. Within 12 months, CPI had breached 9% and the Fed was scrambling with the most aggressive hiking cycle in four decades. Warsh's critics argue the same pattern is repeating: the trimmed-mean is again running well below core measures, and the Fed's new chair is again urging policymakers to look through the data.
For markets, the stakes are binary. If the trimmed-mean is correct and inflation is cooling toward 2%, the Fed has room to cut rates without reigniting price pressures — a scenario that supports risk assets and weighs on the dollar. If the gauge is understating inflation by 48 basis points or more, the central bank risks falling behind the curve again, potentially forcing sharper tightening later that could trigger a bond selloff and equity correction.
The Fed's next rate decision is scheduled for June 16-17. Warsh will chair his first meeting.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.