Kevin Warsh delivers his first major policy speech this week with core inflation at 3.3% and markets parsing every word for clues on how far the Fed's communication overhaul will go.
Kevin Warsh delivers his first major policy speech this week with core inflation at 3.3% and markets parsing every word for clues on how far the Fed's communication overhaul will go.

Kevin Warsh will address markets this week for the first time since stripping forward guidance from the Fed's policy statement, with core inflation at 3.3% and traders watching for signals on the rate path.
"Investors should pay attention not to what he says, but how he says it," said Collin Martin, fixed income strategist at Charles Schwab. "The communication style itself is the signal."
Warsh's first Federal Open Market Committee meeting in June produced a 130-word statement that eliminated forward guidance and the prior easing bias, ending with the declaration that "the Committee will deliver price stability." The chair also declined to submit his own interest rate forecast, breaking with the transparency regime established under predecessors Ben Bernanke, Janet Yellen and Jerome Powell. Core PCE, the Fed's preferred inflation gauge, stood at 3.3% in April — nearly identical to the 3.4% reading when Alan Greenspan took office in August 1987. CPI ran at 4.2% over the 12 months ending May, the largest annual increase since April 2023.
The speech comes as markets weigh the rate path against sticky inflation and ahead of the June jobs report, which will provide the next hard data on labor market tightness. If Warsh signals patience, the 2-year yield could push higher; any hint of a data-dependent pivot would likely fuel equity gains. The stakes extend beyond this week: Warsh has launched five task forces — covering communications, the $6.7 trillion balance sheet, data sources, productivity and inflation modeling — with recommendations due by year-end that could reshape how the Fed operates for a generation.
The Greenspan Playbook
Warsh has explicitly modeled his approach on Alan Greenspan, the only former chair he mentioned by name at his swearing-in ceremony in May. "I intend to fill the role of chairman with energy and purpose just the way Chairman Greenspan did," Warsh said. Greenspan, who died in June at age 100, was famous for deliberate obfuscation — "mumbling with great incoherence," as he once put it. The last time the Fed used such spare language was before the central bank began publishing rate announcements in 1994. Warsh's June 2 letter to the Fed's 20,000-plus employees vowed "open, cleareyed discussions," but his actions since suggest a return to strategic opacity.
Five Task Forces, One Direction
The centerpiece of Warsh's reform agenda is a set of five task forces examining communications, the $6.7 trillion portfolio of government debt and mortgage-backed securities, the data sources the Fed prioritizes, productivity and labor market trends, and the models used to understand inflation. Each task force will be led by external experts handpicked by Warsh, with select Fed staff supporting them. The goal is to complete recommendations by year-end, after which policymakers will decide which reforms to implement. Martin said he does not expect any changes to the balance sheet "anytime soon," suggesting the portfolio review may produce gradual adjustments rather than aggressive unwinding.
The June jobs report, due later this week, will test whether the labor market is cooling enough to give Warsh room to eventually ease. If the data shows continued tightness, Warsh's hawkish posture is likely to persist; a softer print could reopen the door for rate cuts later this year, though the chair's communication strategy makes any such shift harder to predict.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.