All eyes turn to Fed chair Kevin Warsh and his first moves on interest
rates
[June 16, 2026] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — Ever since Kevin Warsh was nominated by President
Trump in late January to lead the Federal Reserve, a question has
lingered: Will he seek to raise interest rates to tame inflation or cut
them as Trump has long demanded?
On Wednesday, Warsh may provide the first hints of an answer when he
oversees his first Fed policy meeting as chair and holds a news
conference afterward. Bond markets, which can swing sharply on a chair's
pronouncements, will be watching particularly closely for any signs of
which way he leans.
“We expect the press conference to be pivotal,” Jonathan Pingle, an
economist at investment bank UBS, wrote in a note. “This will be Kevin
Warsh’s first public appearance as Chair. ...We do not really know what
his policy views are.”
Economists say Warsh will likely aim for a neutral approach, largely
because he is taking over the Fed at a challenging time. Rising
inflation has made it all but impossible for the Fed to cut interest
rates anytime soon, which could stimulate growth and further raise
prices. Hiring has improved noticeably since the beginning of the year,
removing another key rationale for rate cuts. And the other 11
policymakers on the Fed's rate-setting committee — including Warsh's
predecessor, former chair Jerome Powell — are split on whether an
increase in the Fed's key rate will be needed or if it can stay
unchanged.

High inflation puts Fed in tough spot
Oil prices have fallen sharply on news that the U.S. and Iran have
reached an initial deal to end their war, which could eventually cool
inflation. Yet it's unclear whether a permanent agreement can be
reached.
“The right thing to do now is wait and see,” said William English, an
economist at the Yale School of Management and a former top Fed
economist.
Inflation has jumped to a three-year high of 4.2%, the government said
last week, mostly because of higher gas prices. Even Trump has backed
off a bit from his relentless demands for lower rates, and instead has
argued that rate hikes — which the Fed undertakes to cool the economy
and slow inflation -- aren't necessary.
In an interview earlier this month on NBC's “Meet the Press,” Trump
said, “Kevin is fantastic and I want him to do whatever he wants," but
added, “there's no reason to raise rates."
On Wednesday the Fed is widely expected to keep its key rate at about
3.6%, where it has remained since last December. When the Fed reduces
its rate, over time it can lower other borrowing costs for things like
mortgages, auto loans, and business loans.
Changes likely to dash hopes for those seeking lower rates
Still, some changes are expected, which will disappoint those hoping for
lower borrowing costs: The Fed is likely to drop language that suggests
its next move will be a rate cut, and instead adopt wording that is more
neutral. Several Fed policymakers in recent weeks have said that the
Fed's most likely next move is a hike, rather than a cut.
The central bank is also scheduled to release its quarterly economic
projections on Wednesday, which include forecasts for how the Fed's key
rate will change over the next three years. In March, those projections
suggested the Fed would cut its rate once this year. Yet on Wednesday
they will likely show no change in 2026, with maybe one or two cuts next
year, economists say.
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 Warsh has criticized the projections
for providing too much “forward guidance” to financial markets and
leading Fed officials to stand by their forecasts for too long, even
as the economy changes. Fed watchers will look closely to see if
Warsh participates in the quarterly projections. If he doesn't
submit his own forecasts, it could be a sign he will seek to get rid
of them entirely in the coming months.
Warsh to bring a new approach to Fed leadership
Outside of policy, Warsh is expected to bring a different style to
the Fed than Powell, people who've worked with him say. He wants Fed
policymakers to give fewer speeches, have more debates behind closed
doors, and will likely avoid commenting on the daily ups and downs
of the economy. Powell was relatively plainspoken and
straightforward, while Warsh has suggested he sees the famously
oracular Alan Greenspan, the Fed's chair from 1987 to 2005, as a
model.
“He's just going to say less, because he doesn't find that stuff
very helpful," said Robert Tetlow, a former senior policy advisor at
the Fed.
Randall Kroszner, an economist at the University of Chicago who
served on the Fed's governing board from 2006 to 2009, when Warsh
was also a governor, said the new chair would likely focus on
bigger-picture questions, such as how AI will impact the economy. He
will avoid thornier issues, such as whether tariffs raise inflation,
which Powell was willing to address.
By avoiding such hot-button issues, the Fed could attract less
negative attention from the White House, Kroszner said.
“He’s going to stay away from those,” Kroszner added. “If the Fed is
to maintain its independence, it needs to maintain its focus.”
While seeking Trump's nomination, Warsh called for “regime change”
at the Fed and criticized the central bank for not preventing the
2021-22 inflation surge, when prices jumped 9.1% in a year, the
biggest spike in four decades.
Yet Kroszner said that Warsh will likely to seek to build consensus
around changing things like the Fed's communications policies,
rather than imposing them. So far, former Fed officials say he
hasn't sought to fire top staff.
“He's not there to break things,” Kroszner said.

During his Senate confirmation hearing in April, Warsh said he would
focus on quelling inflation.
“Inflation is a choice, and the Fed must take responsibility for
it,” he said then.
If he acts on that sentiment by keeping rates unchanged — or even
raising them — Trump could end up disappointed in another Fed chair.
He often threatened to fire Powell, whom he also appointed, for not
cutting rates deeply enough.
“There's at least a risk here that six months down the road, Trump
is fulminating about how he didn’t get what he wanted from Warsh,
and he'd like to fire Warsh,” English said.
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