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Kevin Warsh at the Fed: Independence Reaffirmed, Prolonged High Rates, Trump at an Impasse

Ongoing story : Fed post-Powell: Kevin Warsh and the New Monetary Era· Part 3/18

MacroSubscribers only Jun 23, 2026 at 21:445Add to bookmarks

Kevin Warsh at the Fed: Independence Reaffirmed, Prolonged High Rates, Trump at an Impasse
Illustration : Anouk Verhoeven

During his first FOMC, the new Federal Reserve Chair distanced himself from both Trump and Powell's legacy-signaling a period of persistently high policy rates and institutional credibility to rebuild.

Context

Kevin Warsh chaired his first FOMC in June 2026. His message, analyzed by Yahoo Finance on June 21, was interpreted as a "subtle distancing" from both Donald Trump and his predecessor Jerome Powell. In a context where the Trump administration has been demanding rapid rate cuts for months, Warsh chose to reaffirm the Fed's operational autonomy and maintain a restrictive bias. Markets immediately revised their expectations: the probabilities of a cut before the end of 2026 declined, the dollar strengthened, and equities came under pressure.

Data

  • Warsh’s first FOMC: June 2026 - status quo maintained on policy rates (Source: Yahoo Finance, June 21, 2026)
  • Fed funds rate: plateau maintained; Fed funds futures lowering 2026 rate cut probabilities
  • European markets open lower on fears of Fed rate hikes (Investing.com, June 23, 2026)
  • Asian markets reprice Fed expectations: equities and oil retreat (Yahoo Finance, June 23, 2026)
  • DXY (Dollar Index): strengthening in response to Warsh’s hawkish stance

Analysis

Warsh’s message is doubly strategic. With respect to Trump, he establishes the Fed’s operational autonomy in the face of political pressure-a position Powell had maintained but which had weakened in his final months due to repeated tensions with the White House. With respect to markets, Warsh signals continuity in the "inflation first" framework while distinguishing himself with a more assertive communication style and less reliance on Powell’s implicit forward guidance.

The relevant historical analogy is Volcker in 1979-1982: a new Fed chair who must simultaneously combat inflation, restore institutional credibility, and resist political pressures. Warsh does not face the same conditions (inflation is more contained), but the credibility mechanism is identical: any premature capitulation erodes the Fed’s future ability to anchor expectations.

For markets, the outcome is binary: rates remain higher for longer, compressing multiples on long-duration assets; the strong dollar weighs on U.S. exporters but attracts capital flows.

Probability-Weighted Scenarios

  • Scenario 1 - Hawkish status quo until Q1 2027 (50%): Warsh keeps Fed funds at current levels, Trump-Fed tensions persist without institutional overreach. Markets adapt to a structural "higher for longer" environment; the yield curve gradually normalizes.
  • Scenario 2 - Conditional first cut in Q4 2026 (30%): If core PCE inflation falls below 2.5% for three consecutive months, Warsh acts. However, he maintains a stated restrictive bias to avoid being seen as a political capitulation.
  • Scenario 3 - Political escalation (20%): If Trump intensifies pressure (parallel nomination attempts, executive orders, aggressive public statements), the risk premium on Treasuries rises. Partial breakdown of institutional independence with lasting effects on the dollar’s credibility.

Portfolio Implications

Avoid long duration on U.S. Treasuries (10-30 years): the repricing risk is asymmetric to the upside. Underweight highly valued mega-cap tech stocks (implicit equity duration > 10 years). Favor financials (beneficiaries of high short-term rates), stocks with predictable dividends, and money market funds as long as short-term yields remain attractive (> 4% on T-bills).

Risks & Blind Spots

The Fed could be caught between faster-than-expected disinflation (forcing a cut) and Trump’s inflationary trade policies (tariffs) maintaining upward pressure. Warsh’s credibility is his primary asset-a premature cut under political pressure would be costly for the institution in the long run.

To Watch

Next FOMC meeting and updated dot plot (September 2026) · Monthly core PCE data (June-August) · Trump’s public statements on monetary policy · DXY movements as a Fed credibility thermometer · 2-year/10-year Treasury spreads (steepening = rate cut anticipation)

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Heinrich VogelÉconomiste macro & banques centrales (Francfort)
Il suit la Fed, la BCE et les grands équilibres macroéconomiques mondiaux.
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Finanz_Fuchs 24 Jun 2026 · 16:58

Warsh spielt Schach, Trump Backgammon - und die Märkte? Die warten auf die nächste Zins-Überraschung. Daten schlagen Hype, endlich.

EconEddie_89 24 Jun 2026 · 16:56

Warsh playing the long game-Trump’s tweets won’t move rates, but will markets keep the faith when the data cracks?

经济小王_沪 24 Jun 2026 · 16:42

沃什的独立立场明智,但长期高利率对市场压力不容忽视,经济韧性考验才刚开始

ekonomist_74 24 Jun 2026 · 15:58

Интересно, как долго рынок будет игнорировать фундаментальные дисбалансы ради веры в «мягкую посадку». История учит осторожности.

le_sceptique 24 Jun 2026 · 15:50

Si la Fed est si indépendante, pourquoi ses taux ressemblent-ils toujours à une danse avec les marchés ? Sources ou c'est du vent.

1
Story timeline

Fed post-Powell: Kevin Warsh and the New Monetary Era

  1. 1Warsh vs Trump: The Fed Resists - and Bond Markets Listen Closely23/06/2026
  2. 2Kevin Warsh Reasserts Fed's Stance: Independence Reaffirmed, Prolonged High Rates, Trump at an Impasse23/06/2026
  3. 3Kevin Warsh at the Fed: Independence Reaffirmed, Prolonged High Rates, Trump at an Impasse23/06/2026
  4. 4Goldman Expects a Persistently Hawkish Fed with Warsh: Markets Resume Rate Pricing23/06/2026
  5. 5Goldman Anticipates Fed's Warsh: High Rates Until 2027, Markets Undervalued on the Pivot24/06/2026
  6. 6Goldman validates Warsh's thesis: the Fed will remain hawkish longer than the consensus anticipates24/06/2026
  7. 7PCE May 2026: U.S. Inflation Exceeds 4%, Warsh's Fed Under Maximum Pressure25/06/2026
  8. 8Kevin Warsh softens his signal: the Fed between anti-inflation credibility and political pragmatism26/06/2026
  9. 9But under $4,000: four weeks of pullback and opportunity cost takes over26/06/2026
  10. 10Low Oil Prices and the Fed: The Deflationary Paradox That Could Trap Warsh26/06/2026
  11. 11Warsh "hammer" & BoJ "appropriate": two central banks fine-tune their signaling ahead of July's double FOMC-BoJ meeting28/06/2026
  12. 12Q2 2026 GDP: Forecasts Rise Despite Hawkish Fed – The Paradox of U.S. Resilience30/06/2026
  13. 13SCOTUS protects the Fed's independence: a hawkish constitutional lock for markets01/07/2026
  14. 14Warsh wants the Fed to talk less. Wall Street is listening even harder.02/07/2026
  15. 15Trump renews offensive against the Fed: governors in the crosshairs03/07/2026
  16. 16NFP June 2026: Disappointing Jobs, Deceptive Unemployment - The Fed Trapped Ahead of the FOMC03/07/2026
  17. 17Warsh: AI Has "Immense Implications" for Rates – Framework Signal or Smokescreen?03/07/2026
  18. 18Gold and central banks: the WGC 2026 survey confirms a structural accumulation cycle04/07/2026
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