US Fed set to hold rates steady at Warsh’s first meeting in charge
Kevin Warsh is sworn in during his nomination hearing to be a member and chairman of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee on Capitol Hill, in Washington, Apr 21, 2026. (Photo: AP/Jose Luis Magana)
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WASHINGTON: The US Federal Reserve is expected to hold interest rates steady on Wednesday (Jun 17) at Kevin Warsh’s first meeting in charge of the central bank, with rate hikes potentially on the horizon to combat surging inflation.
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) policymakers began the second day of their meeting on Wednesday morning, a spokesperson said, with a decision to be announced at 2pm local time (2am, Singapore time).
Republican President Donald Trump has pushed an unprecedented campaign of intimidation to pressure the Fed to lower interest rates.
However, US inflation came in at a three-year high in April, fueled by Trump’s war on Iran, which saw energy prices skyrocket, with knock-on effects on a range of sectors.
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With the labour market firming, Fed policymakers flagged an increased concern about inflation, and rate hikes – not cuts – are potentially in the pipeline to tame raging prices.
Warsh has backed interest rate cuts in the recent past, despite inflation remaining well above the Fed’s long-term 2 per cent target – it was 3.8 per cent in April, according to the central bank’s preferred gauge.
On Wednesday, however, analysts expect Warsh to join other policymakers in allowing the energy price shock to wash over the world’s largest economy before making a move.
“I think he’s going to be in the wait-and-see camp,” said Dan North of Allianz Trade. “It’s pretty hard to justify a cut when you’ve got inflation in the pipeline already.”
“FRACTURED”
While Wednesday’s decision is all but certain to hold interest rates at a range between 3.50 per cent and 3.75 per cent, all eyes will be on the language the Fed uses in its statement.
At least four of 12 voting members of the committee have backed a change in wording to indicate that the next rate move could just as likely be a hike as a cut.
Warsh himself has called for removing the Fed’s forward guidance messaging altogether, arguing that it locks policymakers into a position rather than allowing them to react to changing situations.
Still, change at the central bank tends to be gradual, and analysts do not expect Warsh to take a big swing at his first meeting in charge.
“It may be a more fractured environment, certainly,” Greg Daco, chief economist at EY-Parthenon, told AFP.
“In this first instance, he may be going to suggest some changes to communication, and we may be in the early steps of a move towards more discretionary decisions when it comes to monetary policy.”
Wednesday’s announcement will also see the release of the Fed’s quarterly summary of economic projections, which includes policymakers’ expectations on inflation, growth and the interest-rate path.
As part of his “reform-oriented” agenda, Warsh says he will reduce the level of public communication from the central bank.
He has called for the Fed to scrap its “dot-plot”, a group-tracking of Fed leaders’ expectations on rates, while keeping private each board member’s individual opinion.
On Wednesday, the new Fed chair is expected to withhold his own projection, but analysts say he is unlikely to drop the entire “dot-plot” exercise immediately.
“NOT HELPING HIS CASE”
Pao-Lin Tien, an economics professor at George Washington University, told AFP that moving towards more opaque monetary policymaking could mean inflation expectations are less anchored.
“I think our fear would be that without the forward guidance, inflation expectations might become a little bit more volatile,” she said.
Trump is likely be angered by anything short of a rate cut. The 80-year-old Republican wants to see the Fed lower borrowing costs to increase economic activity – despite the already high inflation.
“President Trump is not helping his own case by making these demands so openly, it makes it harder for anyone he appoints to actually do that,” said Tien.
“He does the opposite of what he needs to do in order to make sure the rates go lower,” she added, referring to the war on Iran.
Source: AFP/co
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