Fed begins Warsh era by keeping rates on hold, sees one hike later this year

Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh delivers a speech on the day of his swearing-in ceremony, in the East Room of the White House in Washington, May 22. The Fed held rates steady on Wednesday, with a rate hike possible later this year.

Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh delivers a speech on the day of his swearing-in ceremony, in the East Room of the White House in Washington, May 22. The Fed held rates steady on Wednesday, with a rate hike possible later this year. (Evelyn Hockstein, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady on Wednesday, but expects a rate hike later this year.
  • New Fed Chair Kevin Warsh's influence is evident in the revised policy statement.
  • Inflation is projected to slow next year, with rates returning to current levels by 2027.

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady on Wednesday, but policymakers expect a hike in borrowing costs later this year amid growing ​concerns about inflation lodged above the central bank's 2% target.

New quarterly projections showed nine Fed officials now anticipate a hike in rates by the end of 2026, and an updated policy statement removed language that had been used ‌to flag the likelihood of further reductions in borrowing costs this year.

Indeed, the statement, in an early sign of new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh's influence, removed any guidance ⁠about future rate moves altogether, with a revised format that simply ​stated the rate decision and reaffirmed the central bank's intent ⁠to keep "ample reserves in the banking system."

The shortened document, a return to a format similar to that used by former Fed Chair ‌Alan Greenspan, was approved by a ‌unanimous 12-0 vote by the central bank's Federal Open Market Committee.

The statement showed other signs of Warsh's early ⁠influence on the debate as he takes over after being appointed earlier this ⁠year by President Donald Trump with an expectation that he would deliver the rate cuts the president has demanded.

The description of the economy touched on issues Warsh has emphasized, mentioning that "productivity growth and capital investment are strong." While acknowledging that inflation was "elevated relative to the Committee's 2% goal," that development was assigned in part to "supply shocks that have driven price increases in certain sectors, including energy."

New projections show inflation slowing sharply next year, allowing rates to return to where they are now by ‌the end of 2027 and easing modestly further in 2028.

"The Committee will deliver price stability," ​the statement said.

Treasury yields rose after the release of the policy statement and projections. U.S. stocks fell modestly while the dollar gained ground against a basket of currencies. Short-term interest-rate futures are now pricing a bigger chance of a rate hike by September than a hold.

Missing dot

Only 18 of 19 policymakers submitted rate projections for the so-called "dot-plot" chart released by the Fed, and while the missing "dot" is not identifiable, it was presumably withheld by Warsh, who is only about three weeks into the job and has been critical of the quarterly Summary of Economic Projections.

The statement marks a turning point not just in leadership ​at the central bank but in a monetary policy outlook that since the fall of 2024 had been geared to lower borrowing costs from the elevated ‌rates used to ‌help tame inflation that hit ⁠40-year highs during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Projections among officials showed the policy interest rate, which has been set in the 3.50%-3.75% range since last December, would rise by a quarter of a percentage point by the end of this year.

The outlook for inflation for the end of 2026 was marked up to 3.6% from 2.7%, before it is seen falling to 2.3% next year, all without a rate increase, ‌consistent with the statement language attributing high ​prices to supply disruptions that would typically be expected to pass.

Economic growth ‌was marked down slightly, with the unemployment ⁠rate expected to end ​the year at 4.4%, the same as in the Fed's March projections.

Contributing: Michael S. Derby and Ann Saphir

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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