Hopes For Rate Cuts Are Fading Despite Warsh Taking Top Fed Job
Sticky inflation and rising oil prices are forcing markets to rethink
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- Written by Banking Exchange staff
Hopes that the arrival of Kevin Warsh as chair of the US Federal Reserve would usher in quicker interest rate cuts are already being adjusted.
Warsh, a former Fed governor and long-time critic of some of the central bank’s post-crisis policies, had been viewed by parts of the market as a potentially more flexible successor to Jerome Powell. That narrative has weakened quickly as fresh inflation concerns cloud the outlook.
With the US job market showing few signs of a firm recovery, and inflation rising steadily over the past two months, Fed officials look unlikely to speed up rate cuts despite what the White House may want.
Price pressures have rebounded, driven partly by higher oil prices and the knock-on effects of geopolitical tensions, which have made it harder to justify loosening monetary policy in the near term. Markets that previously priced in multiple cuts this year have since scaled back those bets.
While Warsh is expected to bring a different communication style to the role — favoring less forward guidance and greater policy ambiguity — analysts do not expect a dramatic shift in the Fed’s immediate path.
Monetary policy is still decided collectively by the Federal Open Market Committee, meaning Warsh inherits a committee that remains cautious on inflation and reluctant to ease too early.
His appointment may still matter over time, particularly on balance sheet policy and the Fed’s broader approach to market signalling. But for now, the economic backdrop is doing most of the talking.
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