Kevin Warsh's July 14 House testimony arrives with nine Fed officials projecting a rate hike this year — up from zero six weeks ago.
Kevin Warsh's July 14 House testimony arrives with nine Fed officials projecting a rate hike this year — up from zero six weeks ago.

Kevin Warsh's first House testimony as Fed chair on July 14 lands with nine officials projecting a 2026 rate hike, up from zero six weeks ago, as inflation data runs hot.
"Every Fed meeting is now live for a potential rate hike, including the one roughly six weeks away," Bob Michael, chief investment officer at JPMorgan Asset Management, told CNBC's Closing Bell Overtime.
The fed funds rate upper bound sits at 3.75%, unchanged since December 2025 after 75 basis points of cuts from the September peak of 4.5%. The 10-year Treasury closed at 4.49% on June 17, trading inside a 4.20% to 4.58% range, while the 2-year yield held near its 12-month peak at 4.20%. The VIX jumped 12.4% to 18.44, reflecting rising uncertainty around the policy path.
Polymarket traders currently price 26.15% odds of a hike by the July 29 FOMC meeting, climbing to 43% by September and 53% by October. If Warsh signals a move is imminent during his testimony, those probabilities could spike, triggering a repricing across Treasuries, equities, and the dollar.
Inflation Gives Warsh Cover
Core PCE, the Fed's preferred inflation gauge, hit 129.63 in April, the highest reading in the 12-month window. Michael said inflation could peak in May but cautioned that confirming data will not be available for some time. The last time the Fed faced a similar inflation trajectory was in early 2023, when the fed funds rate was still climbing toward its 5.25% to 5.50% peak — a cycle that ultimately delivered 525 basis points of tightening before the first cut in September 2024.
Warsh has already signaled a break from his predecessor's communication style. He told reporters after his first FOMC meeting that he would be "tearing up the script" on Fed communications and launching task forces across five major workstreams. That shift has drawn criticism from some market participants. "I don't understand why rolling back transparency is either good for market participants or for the Federal Reserve in terms of trying to manage the volatility and backstop the banking system," Michael said.
What to Watch on July 14
The hearing gives lawmakers their first chance to question Warsh publicly since he took office. Investors will parse his prepared remarks for any shift in forward guidance, particularly around the phrase "patient" or "data-dependent" — code words that have historically signaled the Fed's next move. The last time a Fed chair used language this hawkish in a congressional setting was Jerome Powell in March 2023, when he told lawmakers rates "may need to go higher" — a statement that preceded a 25-basis-point hike at the subsequent meeting.
The July 29 FOMC decision now looms as the next inflection point. With nine officials already projecting a hike and inflation running above target, Warsh's testimony could determine whether the market prices that move as a certainty or continues to debate its probability.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.