- Powell announced he will remain on the Fed board as a governor after his chairmanship ends next month — breaking a 75-year precedent and denying Trump the vacancy he was counting on for a new appointment.
- Four FOMC members dissented at Wednesday’s meeting — the most since 1992 — with three regional presidents opposing any signal that rate cuts are more likely than hikes.
- Underlying inflation is stuck near 3%, energy prices are rising on the Strait of Hormuz closure, and tariffs are still feeding through the system, making near-term cuts increasingly implausible.
- Kevin Warsh’s nomination advanced through Senate Banking on a party-line vote — the first ever for a Fed chair nominee — with his first meeting as chair set for June 16-17.
What Happened?
In an extraordinary Wednesday, the Federal Reserve held rates steady while fracturing publicly in ways not seen in decades. Fed Chair Jerome Powell announced he would remain on the board as a governor after ceding the chairmanship to Kevin Warsh next month, breaking with every predecessor for the past 75 years. His stated reason: concern that “a series of legal attacks on the Fed” — including a criminal probe of building renovations that prosecutors recently dropped, and Trump’s effort to fire a sitting governor now before the Supreme Court — are “battering the institution.” Trump mocked the decision, saying Powell “can’t get a job anywhere else.” Meanwhile, four FOMC members dissented: Cleveland’s Beth Hammack, Minneapolis’s Neel Kashkari, and Dallas’s Lorie Logan (all opposing any rate-cut bias), and Trump appointee Stephen Miran (favoring a cut). It was the most dissents at any meeting since 1992.
Why It Matters?
Warsh is inheriting a Fed in open institutional conflict. The three hawkish regional presidents weren’t just signaling their view on rates — they were sending a message to Warsh: this committee will not rubber-stamp White House rate-cut demands. With the Strait of Hormuz closure pushing energy prices higher, core inflation near 3%, and tariff effects still working through the system, the hawks have a strong empirical case. Powell’s decision to stay also reshuffles the governance math — it denies Trump the vacancy that would have given his administration a majority of governor seats, while creating an awkward dynamic where the outgoing chair sits in the room as his successor tries to lead. JPMorgan’s chief U.S. economist put it plainly: “His first meeting is not going to be one in which he goes in there and dictates policy.”
What’s Next?
Warsh’s first meeting as chair is June 16-17. Markets will be watching whether he can consolidate authority over a divided committee or whether dissent becomes routine — a scenario that would dampen the clarity signal the Fed has historically used to guide long-term interest rates. A Fed that’s harder to read risks somewhat higher borrowing costs across the board. Meanwhile, Powell’s fate on the board remains open-ended — he said he’ll stay “for an undetermined amount of time,” leaving the balance of power on the seven-member board in flux. Whether Trump can legally remove a sitting Fed governor is still before the Supreme Court, meaning the institutional standoff is far from over.
Source: The Wall Street Journal









