MacroSubscribers only Jun 24, 2026 at 18:3511Add to bookmarks

Goldman Sachs revises upward its Fed Funds forecast for 2026, confirming that Kevin Warsh is steering U.S. monetary policy with a structurally more restrictive philosophy than Powell. The implications for long-term rates, the dollar, and equity valuations are profound.
On June 23, 2026, Goldman Sachs released a note revising upward its forecast for the Fed Funds rate in 2026-2027 (Yahoo Finance, June 23, 2026). The bank argues that Kevin Warsh, the new Fed Chair since January 2026, has adopted a structurally more hawkish stance than Jerome Powell, and that markets are still underestimating the duration of this restrictive posture.
Warsh is known for his skepticism toward excessive monetary accommodation. At his first FOMC meeting in June 2026, he explicitly distanced his inflation outlook from Powell’s, signaling that asymmetric risks are to the upside, not the downside. Goldman interprets these signals as the onset of a new Fed regime: if inflation remains above 3%, the policy rate could stay at 5.25% until H2 2027. This "higher for longer 2.0" may be more durable than the 2022-2024 episode, as it is driven by philosophical conviction rather than reactive urgency. Direct consequence: the June 2026 tech sell-off is partly explained by this repricing, with long-duration assets being the first hit by rising real rates.
Overweight the dollar (UUP ETF) and floating-rate instruments in the defensive portion. Underweight long duration (TLT, 10-year+ government bonds). For equities: derating of high-valuation stocks (>30x P/E); favor financials, energy, and value. Emerging markets borrowing in USD (Turkey, Argentina, Brazil) face structural pressure.
A negative growth shock (US recession) would force Warsh to pivot despite his philosophy. Political pressure from the Trump administration (repeated pro-cut statements) creates uncertainty over the Fed’s effective independence. The deflationary effect of Chinese exports could surprise CPI to the downside earlier than expected.
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Goldman’s model now sees 2026 at 3.25%? Cute. Last time they called a soft landing, inflation was still ‘transitory.’
Permettez-moi de douter... La Fed hawkish jusqu'en 2026 ? Dans un monde idéal, oui, mais ici, les marchés ont l'habitude de faire plier les dogmes. Cf. 2008.
26年まで引き締め継続か。市場はまだ甘い見通しでいるが、Warshの哲学は冷徹だな
Des taux durablement hauts, c'est le prix de l'orthodoxie monétaire. Mais à quel coût pour l'économie réelle et les PME ? Les données le diront.
Goldman qui valide Warsh, c'est comme un renard qui approuve le plan de sécurité du poulailler. La Fed a toujours su nous surprendre... à la baisse.
Goldman a raison : Warsh ne lâchera rien sur l'inflation. Les marchés sous-estiment encore la durée du serrage monétaire.
Goldman sous-estime encore l'inertie des taux : Warsh + inflation résiduelle = 2026 sera bien plus long que prévu.
15 ans de finance pour voir des banques vendre du vent et des mecs comme Warsh jouer aux apprentis sorciers. Rien de nouveau sous le soleil, juste du Powell en pire.
La Fed en mode Sisyphe : remonter les taux, encore et toujours, comme si l’inflation était un rocher éternel.
Goldman’s call is just Wall Street hedging-Warsh’s ghost won’t tame inflation, but it’ll sure crush growth.
À mon époque, on appelait ça de la prudence, pas une révolution. Les jeunes voient du génie là où il n’y a que du bon sens.
Fed post-Powell: Kevin Warsh and the New Monetary Era