The IIF's warning adds a formal institutional voice to concerns that Warsh's reshaping of the Fed could amplify financial stress in developing economies.
The IIF's warning adds a formal institutional voice to concerns that Warsh's reshaping of the Fed could amplify financial stress in developing economies.

The Institute of International Finance warned that a more hawkish Federal Reserve under Chair Kevin Warsh, combined with renewed oil price volatility, could tighten dollar liquidity and raise risk thresholds for emerging markets already facing $46 billion in equity outflows.
"The combination of a less communicative Fed and oil supply uncertainty creates a dangerous cocktail for emerging-market borrowers," the IIF said in a report, citing risks of capital outflows, currency depreciation and stagflationary pressures in commodity-importing economies.
South Korea and Taiwan accounted for the bulk of the $46 billion emerging-market equity exodus in June, exchange data show, as investors repriced the outlook for U.S. rates under Warsh. The Fed chair has outlined plans to shrink the central bank's balance sheet, shorten policy statements and adopt a trimmed-average inflation measure — changes that could reduce dollar liquidity and make rate expectations harder to read. U.S. markets are already bracing for renewed funding pressure as leverage rises, Reuters reported.
For emerging economies that borrowed heavily in dollars during the low-rate era, tighter dollar liquidity raises refinancing costs and heightens the risk of currency crises. The IIF said commodity importers face the greatest strain if oil prices spike alongside a stronger dollar, a scenario that could push broader risk-off sentiment across equity and credit markets.
Warsh, who took the helm at the Fed earlier this year, has already begun reshaping how the central bank communicates. At the June 16-17 FOMC meeting, the Fed issued an unusually short policy statement, and Warsh abstained from the Summary of Economic Projections, arguing that investors should interpret economic data on their own. He has created five task forces to examine communications, the balance sheet, data sources, productivity and inflation frameworks.
The shift toward less forward guidance marks a departure from recent precedent. Fed Governor Christopher Waller recently said he "continue[s] to believe that forward guidance can be a valuable tool," suggesting potential internal divisions. Warsh acknowledged "a good family fight" over the rate decision at the June meeting, and the minutes showed members hold differing views on the appropriate level of rates by year-end.
Dollar Liquidity and the Balance Sheet
Warsh has expressed a desire to shrink the Fed's balance sheet more aggressively and rely less on quantitative easing, which he argues disproportionately benefits holders of financial assets. Reducing the balance sheet tightens dollar liquidity globally because it drains reserves from the banking system — a process that has historically been difficult to execute without unsettling markets. The last time the Fed attempted significant balance sheet reduction in 2018-2019, it led to a repo market crisis that forced the central bank to reverse course. A similar dynamic today could amplify stress in emerging markets that depend on dollar-denominated credit, the IIF noted.
Oil Volatility Adds to the Strain
The IIF's warning comes as oil prices face renewed volatility from geopolitical and supply-side risks. For commodity-importing emerging economies, a spike in crude prices combined with a stronger dollar and higher U.S. rates could produce stagflationary conditions — slower growth alongside higher inflation. That dynamic would pressure central banks in countries such as India, Turkey and Indonesia to raise rates even as their economies slow, potentially causing a wave of capital outflows. The IIF said the simultaneous tightening of monetary conditions and commodity price shocks creates a risk profile reminiscent of the 2013 taper tantrum, when the Fed's signal of reduced bond buying triggered a selloff across emerging-market assets.
The fed funds rate currently stands at 5.25 percent to 5.5 percent, unchanged since July 2023 after the last 25-basis-point cut. The FOMC's June meeting minutes showed members hold differing views on the appropriate level of rates by year-end, and Warsh's hawkish tilt has shifted expectations toward fewer cuts. The next FOMC meeting in September will offer the first clear test of whether Warsh can build consensus for his agenda or faces sustained opposition from within the committee.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.