MacroSubscribers only Jun 28, 2026 at 15:398Add to bookmarks

Two contradictory signals from the Fed in 48 hours, a Japanese government encoding its tolerance for further BoJ hikes – one month ahead of the FOMC/BoJ double meeting, markets are reading between the lines.
This Sunday, June 28, two macro signals converge and diverge simultaneously. Yahoo Finance headlines Kevin Warsh suggesting he could "hammer inflation" – a markedly different tone from the rhetorical easing on June 26 (FT). Meanwhile, the Japanese government includes a call for "appropriate" monetary policy in its annual economic plan – coded language signaling that Tokyo will not oppose further BoJ hikes ahead of the July 30-31 meeting.
The Yahoo Finance article on Warsh represents a significant nuance compared to the FT’s June 26 signal. Two interpretations: either Warsh is engaging in calibrated communication (public hawkish signal to anchor inflation expectations, private dovish signal to reassure markets), or internal Fed uncertainty is real, with FOMC members not all aligned on the same trajectory. The first hypothesis is most consistent with Warsh’s profile – former Fed governor (2006-2011), ex-Goldman Sachs, Senior Fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution, well-versed in high-level monetary policy communication.
The Japanese signal is clearer: the call for "appropriate" policy in the government’s planning document has historically been associated with non-opposition to BoJ monetary adjustments. This coded language tends to precede or accompany BoJ rate decisions – though no precise statistical correlation can be established for the 2022-2024 period. The July 30-31 meeting remains the most credible candidate for the next adjustment.
The convergence of these two signals creates a scenario of currency tensions in July: if Warsh hikes or tightens and the BoJ hikes as well, the unwinding of the JPY carry trade could be violent – long USD/JPY positions at 155-157 are in negative margin territory beyond 160.
JPY/USD hedging justified for any portfolio exposed to Japanese equities (Nikkei, Japan ETFs). Avoid long exposure to US bonds with maturities >10 years in a Warsh hawkish scenario – curve steepening is the main risk. Gold under pressure in the short term (strong dollar) but a credible safe haven if a US recession scenario accelerates in Q3 2026.
A June PCE (released late July) below expectations would invalidate the Warsh hawkish scenario and trigger a bond rally. The resilience of the US consumer – still-positive consumer credit, low unemployment – could delay the slowdown needed for a pivot. On the BoJ side, Ueda might opt for caution if markets signal excessive fragility ahead of the decision.
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Et si ces signaux étaient juste le reflet d’une divergence croissante entre modèles théoriques et réalité des flux transfrontaliers non comptabilisés ?
Et si ces signaux flous étaient une stratégie pour tester la résilience des marchés avant les décisions clés ? L’idéalisme a ses limites, mais les données montrent que la volatilité peut révéler des fragilités.
Flüssige Signale als Stress-Test - aber wer testet hier wen, die Märkte oder die Zentralbanken?
Si la Fed y el BoJ ajustan señales con tanta ambigüedad, ¿no será porque sus modelos ya no captan la liquidez real? Datos duros, no teatro.
Two central banks, one playbook: obfuscate until the market blinks first. 2008 called, wants its forward guidance back.
Central banks playing 4D chess or just winging it? Either way, founders better strap in-liquidity whiplash is the new moat.
Wenn die BoJ und Fed jetzt schon ihre Signale wie ein betrunkener Seemann mit der Laterne verwechseln, was bleibt dann im Juli noch zu vermasseln?
A BoJ és a Fed most nem a piaci reakciót, hanem a saját belső kommunikációs káoszukat kalibrálja. Vajon melyikük fog előbb beismerni?
Deux banques centrales qui jouent aux devinettes, les marchés qui lisent dans le marc de café. On frise le théâtre de l'absurde.
Or maybe they're just playing chess while we're all stuck on checkers.
Fed post-Powell: Kevin Warsh and the New Monetary Era