Kevin Warsh Named Fed Chair, Signals Dovish Rates
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- Kevin Warsh was confirmed as the new Federal Reserve chair, succeeding Jerome Powell, after being nominated by President Donald Trump.
- Kevin Warsh signaled a more dovish stance on interest rates, hinting at possible cuts, while remaining hawkish on the Fed’s balance sheet and critical of quantitative easing.
- Kevin Warsh argued that AI‑driven productivity gains and one‑off tariff shocks would help lower inflation, which has been above the Fed’s 2% target—CPI at 3.8% in April and PPI up 6%.
- Wachirawat Banchuen, senior strategist at Siam Commercial Bank Financial Markets, expects Warsh to curb Trump’s direct influence on Fed policy, to reduce the number of FOMC meetings and press conferences, and to provide less forward guidance.
Why it matters: Borrowers will see lower rates as Warsh eyes cuts amid 3.8% CPI inflation, while bond markets feel tighter QE limits as he criticizes balance‑sheet growth.



