The challenges facing Kevin Warsh as Federal Reserve chair
New Federal Reserve chair Kevin Warsh has promised to cut interest rates, but the Iran crisis will make that difficult to deliver
Donald Trump will swear in Kevin Warsh as the new chair of the US Federal Reserve, replacing Jerome Powell, in what was supposed to be the big monetary policy event of the year. Kevin Warsh, like all of Trump's preferred candidates for the Fed's board of governors, has sounded very keen to cut interest rates. Assuming that he was not simply paying lip service to the president's wishes in order to win the nomination, that would mean huge pressure in the Fed for aggressive easing. Yet it is no longer so clear that the change of chair will matter much.
The Middle East crisis has changed the calculation. Markets are now pricing in interest-rate rises rather than cuts, while longer-term bond yields are rising again. Of course, a central bank that is determined to slash short-term interest rates could ignore fears about inflation and cut regardless. It could also try to control long-term yields by buying up longer-dated bonds. But in this environment, it is far less likely that Trump's appointees will be able to shift consensus among other board members towards much looser policy. Nor is it obvious from his own record that Kevin Warsh will be quite so dovish for now, notwithstanding his frequently expressed view that AI will usher in productivity gains that justify structurally lower rates.
Interest rates are not Kevin Warsh's biggest problem
All else being equal, easier policy would have been even more bullish for already-exuberant stock markets, especially in the US. Yet investors have not been behaving as if policy was too restrictive anyway.
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Note how strongly markets have risen with interest rates where they are. Short-term rates at around 4% and longer-term rates at around 5% only look high by the abnormal standards of the 2010s.
So the real risk to markets is not that interest-rate cuts don't come. Instead, it is the hard reality of where fears about inflation are coming from: the disruption to energy supplies. Every week, markets trade as if the crisis will be resolved; every week, we see no solid progress. If this finally starts to catch up with the real economy – which could happen in early June, some analysts reckon – the Fed's decision to tinker or not to tinker will quickly become irrelevant.
A date for your diary
The first of the twice-yearly Mello conferences for private investors takes place next month, on Tuesday 2 and Wednesday 3 June in West London. This event always features an interesting line-up of several dozen companies and funds presenting to existing and prospective investors: one of the highlights in last November's event was Seraphim Space, which has been the star of the investment-trust sector this year. Mello is offering MoneyWeek's readers a 25% discount on tickets – go to melloevents.com/mello2026 and use the code M26MW25 to book.
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Cris Sholt Heaton is the contributing editor for MoneyWeek.
He is an investment analyst and writer who has been contributing to MoneyWeek since 2006 and was managing editor of the magazine between 2016 and 2018. He is experienced in covering international investing, believing many investors still focus too much on their home markets and that it pays to take advantage of all the opportunities the world offers.
He often writes about Asian equities, international income and global asset allocation.