- In his first meeting as Fed chair, Kevin Warsh trimmed the policy statement, declined to submit a personal rate forecast, and launched five task forces covering everything from communications to economic analysis — stripping away the forward guidance his predecessors relied upon.
- Warsh vowed the committee would “unambiguously and unanimously” bring inflation to its 2% target, calling out five consecutive years of misses — but refused to say whether that meant rate hikes, leaving markets to draw their own conclusions.
- The committee is nearly evenly split: half see rates at current levels by year-end, half see them higher — and the probability of a September hike jumped above 50% after the meeting, up from ~30% the day before.
- Critics say Warsh conflated legitimate objections to “forward guidance” with a wholesale refusal to explain the Fed’s policy framework, leaving even seasoned Fed watchers unable to gauge how the committee will respond to economic data.
What Happened?
Kevin Warsh used his inaugural FOMC meeting to restructure how the Federal Reserve communicates with markets. He shortened the post-meeting statement, eliminated verbal or written hints about future moves — so-called forward guidance — and notably sat out the quarterly “dot plot” of rate projections, declining to submit his own forecast. He announced five task forces to study Fed communications, economic modeling, and policy frameworks. His one emphatic commitment: that the committee was “united and determined” to bring inflation down to 2%. “We’ve missed for five years, and we’re going to fix that,” he said. When pressed on whether that meant rate increases, he deflected: “The good news is we’ll be meeting in six weeks.”
Why It Matters?
Markets immediately interpreted Warsh’s hawkish inflation pledge and the divided dot plot as signaling a higher-for-longer stance. September rate-hike odds surged above 50%. But the deeper concern among Fed watchers is structural: by eliminating both forward guidance and any explanation of the committee’s policy framework, Warsh has made the Fed’s next move essentially unreadable. JPMorgan’s Michael Feroli noted the distinction between predicting the next move — something central banks can legitimately avoid — and explaining how the committee reasons about the economy, which is “not forward guidance, that’s having a framework.” BNP Paribas now expects three rate hikes beginning in December, reversing all of last year’s cuts.
What’s Next?
The task forces Warsh launched are expected to report back over the coming months, with potential changes to the dot plot format and communication strategy. In the meantime, every data release — inflation, jobs, retail sales — will be parsed with unusual intensity because there is no stated framework for how the committee will respond. Warsh faces a deeper challenge: reconciling campaign-trail advocacy for lower rates with a committee that appears determined to hike. Former Bank of America economist Ethan Harris framed it bluntly: Warsh “has to now somehow get a set of campaign promises aimed at getting the job and switch to convincing the committee that all of those promises are consistent with what a technocratic, independent Fed would do.”
Source: The Wall Street Journal













