Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh's hawkish debut revived rate hike prospects, with Ed Yardeni warning 50 bps may be needed for the 2 percent target.
Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh's hawkish debut revived rate hike prospects, with Ed Yardeni warning 50 bps may be needed for the 2 percent target.

Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh's hawkish debut revived rate hike prospects, with Ed Yardeni warning 50 bps may be needed for the 2 percent target.
Warsh used his debut press conference Wednesday to emphasize zero tolerance for above-target inflation, sending US stocks lower and pushing short-term Treasury yields higher as markets repriced the odds of a rate increase.
"The Fed has now gone more than five years without hitting its 2 percent target. How do you get there without raising rates?" Yardeni, president of Yardeni Research, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. "A 25 or 50 basis point hike is not the end of the world."
The S&P 500 fell while two-year Treasury yields climbed as Warsh focused on price stability over labor market conditions in his prepared remarks and Q&A session. The new chair also declined to release the quarterly dot plot of individual rate projections, removing a key policy reference that markets have relied on for years to gauge the likely direction of rates.
The hawkish tone introduces uncertainty for equity and fixed-income markets that had priced a steady-to-lower rate path. If Warsh follows through with a hike, it would be the Fed's first increase since it began cutting rates in late 2024 — a reversal that could reshape portfolio positioning across equities, bonds and currencies.
Yardeni, who earlier this year set an S&P 500 year-end 2026 target of 8,250 — the highest on Wall Street — compared Warsh's communication style to former Chair Alan Greenspan: "Not a lot of information, plenty of ambiguity, and occasional surprises." The strategist said Warsh may have struck a more dovish posture with President Donald Trump before taking office but has since returned to his longstanding hawkish views on inflation.
The last time a Fed chair used similarly hawkish language in a debut press conference was in 2022, when Jerome Powell announced the start of the most aggressive tightening cycle in four decades. Two-year yields rose more than 200 basis points over the following six months, while the S&P 500 entered a bear market.
Warsh's Dot Plot Exit Adds Uncertainty
By opting out of the dot plot, Warsh acted on his long-held criticism that Fed communications move markets more than actual rate decisions. He has previously argued that the central bank places "undue weight" on its own messaging, with press conferences moving markets more than interest rate changes. Morgan Stanley analysts have forecast a "leaner, quieter" Federal Reserve under his leadership. The absence of individual rate projections leaves investors with fewer guideposts for the policy path, making each public appearance more consequential for markets.
Oil Prices Offer a Potential Escape Route
Yardeni also pointed to a factor that could spare the Fed from having to act: falling oil prices. Gasoline prices have declined in recent weeks, and a temporary ceasefire agreement in the Middle East this week could push crude lower still, easing a key driver of headline inflation.
"Warsh might get lucky," Yardeni said. If inflation recedes naturally, the Fed could hold rates steady without sacrificing its credibility on the 2 percent target. But if price pressures prove sticky, he argued, a modest hike could even be welcomed by bond markets as a commitment to price stability.
The Fed's next policy decision is scheduled for late July, giving Warsh roughly six weeks to assess whether inflation data cooperates — or forces his hand.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.