Kevin Warsh delivers his first Humphrey-Hawkins testimony Monday as markets price a 79.5% probability the Fed holds rates steady at the July 28-29 meeting.
Kevin Warsh delivers his first Humphrey-Hawkins testimony Monday as markets price a 79.5% probability the Fed holds rates steady at the July 28-29 meeting.

Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh will use his first testimony to emphasize price stability while avoiding firm forward guidance, as markets price a 79.5% probability the central bank holds its benchmark rate at 3.50% to 3.75% through the July 28-29 meeting.
"The bond market is interpreting Warsh's focus on price stability and lack of explicit guidance as consistent with a hold in July," said Michael McKee, Bloomberg Television correspondent covering the Federal Reserve. "But rising energy prices inject real uncertainty into that baseline."
The Fed has kept the federal funds rate unchanged since Warsh took office in May, following a period of tightening that lifted the benchmark from near zero to the current 3.50%-3.75% range. The decision comes as ongoing inflation concerns persist, driven by energy price shocks and heightened geopolitical risk in the Gulf region. Overnight index swaps currently imply a 79.5% probability of no change at the July meeting, with the remaining 20.5% pricing a quarter-point hike.
Warsh's testimony will also face scrutiny over five newly created policy task forces examining the central bank's approach to communications, balance sheet policy, data, productivity and jobs, and inflation frameworks. The 15 co-leaders include four Harvard economics professors and three Harvard alumni, alongside former central bankers from the Bank of England, the Reserve Bank of India, and the Bank for International Settlements.
The balance sheet policy task force, co-led by Harvard's Karen Dynan and Jeremy Stein alongside former RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan, will review the costs and benefits of the Fed's roughly $6.7 trillion balance sheet. The inflation frameworks group, headed by Harvard's Gregory Mankiw and NYU's Thomas Sargent, will examine how the Fed understands and responds to inflation drivers — a particularly timely review given the current price environment.
The task forces operate independently and are expected to conclude their work by the end of 2026, according to the Fed's press release. Their findings could reshape how the Federal Open Market Committee approaches everything from rate communication to balance sheet management.
Historical Context
The last time a new Fed chair faced Congress with inflation above target and geopolitical tensions flaring was Jerome Powell in 2018. Powell's first testimony that year struck a similarly cautious tone, and the Fed proceeded to raise rates in December 2018 — a move that triggered a sharp equity selloff and prompted a subsequent policy pivot. The S&P 500 fell 9.2% in the four weeks following that hike before the Fed reversed course with cuts in 2019.
What to Watch
Investors will focus on any shifts in Warsh's tone that might suggest a change in the Fed's current stance. Key indicators include the next CPI and core PCE readings, with particular attention to any unexpected spikes that could alter market expectations. The July 28-29 FOMC meeting will be the first real test of whether Warsh's emphasis on price stability translates into action — or whether the data-dependent posture he is expected to articulate leaves the door open for a prolonged pause.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.