‘He’s got a tough job there now,’ said Jim Bianco, president and macro strategist at Bianco Research.
News Analysis
The Federal Reserve’s monetary policymaking playbook recommends looking past the initial impact of a global energy price shock and examine underlying inflation instead.
Headline inflation—at home and broad—has accelerated since the outbreak of war in the Middle East three months ago as businesses and households are paying more for energy.
While a barrel of crude oil has fallen below $90, U.S. motorists are paying a national average of $4 a gallon.
In the United States, the annual inflation rate has risen to its highest level since May 2023.
Recent indicators suggest fallout from the war in Iran could be filtering through the rest of the marketplace.
It’s now up to the Federal Reserve to determine whether there will be persistent inflation risks that could threaten the price stability side of the century-old institution’s dual mandate.
For a central bank presumably under political pressure to lower interest rates, the initial few months on the job could be challenging for new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh.
Markets are pricing in a rate hike by the fall at the earliest, a complete reversal from several months ago, when investors had been forecasting one or two interest rate cuts.
Warsh has adopted a hybrid dovish-hawkish stance on monetary policy over the past two years.
On the one hand, he has expressed sympathy for President Donald Trump’s call to lower interest rates amid the artificial intelligence (AI) boom.
On the other hand, Warsh wants to tighten the balance sheet, which currently sits slightly below $7 trillion.
Should Warsh support reducing the benchmark federal funds rate—a key policy rate that influences borrowing costs for businesses and consumers—he will have to assure markets this is the right course of action, says Jim Bianco, president and macro strategist at Bianco Research.
“He’s got to convince the market that the right policy is to cut rates when the market is thinking the right policy might be to raise rates,” Bianco said in a recent interview with Siyamak Khorrami, host of EpochTV’s “Markets Insider.”
By Andrew Moran







