Warsh’s Fed Debut Rattles Markets

Company News

by Finance News Network


Kevin Warsh’s inaugural meeting as chairman of the US Federal Reserve sent shivers through Wall Street, despite initial expectations his tenure would usher in lower interest rates. The S&P 500 index closed down 1.2 per cent on Wednesday night, marking the most significant market slump for a new Fed chair’s first rates decision since 1994. Even SpaceX, a seemingly robust public company, experienced a 5 per cent decline after a strong initial market performance.

While the Federal Reserve kept interest rates steady between 3.5 per cent and 3.75 per cent, Warsh’s post-meeting commentary and new projections signalled a firm commitment to battling inflation. Warsh, known for his aversion to explicit forward guidance, made it clear the Fed would no longer signal near-term rate directions. However, he emphatically stated, “The committee will deliver price stability.” This resolve, coupled with nine of 18 officials now expecting higher rates by year-end – a stark contrast to zero in March – led investors to anticipate potential rate increases.

The market quickly interpreted Warsh’s strong stance on inflation and revised dot plot projections as a signal the Fed is prepared to lift rates, possibly twice, this year – a significant reversal from earlier expectations of two rate cuts. This triggered a surge in Treasury yields; the US two-year rate climbed 0.17 percentage points to 4.22 per cent, its highest since February 2025, with the 10-year yield nearing 4.5 per cent. This underscores the Fed’s predicament in a “higher-for-longer” world, where protracted above-target inflation jeopardises its credibility and risks unanchoring expectations. In a related development, private equity firm Thoma Bravo incurred a $7 billion loss by handing software firm Medallia back to lenders. Medallia, which provides customer experience management solutions, struggled with excessive debt amidst AI disruption, serving as a stark reminder of current financial pressures.


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