Warsh at the Fed: Are Rate Cuts Any Closer?
President Trump’s move to nominate Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve chair, expected to take over when Jerome Powell’s term ends in May 2026, has quickly reignited one question: do lower interest rates move from “maybe later” to “sooner than expected”? The timing is what’s driving the noise. The Fed just kept rates unchanged and repeated that inflation is still “somewhat elevated,” which is a clear signal that any cuts will need evidence, not headlines.
That’s why “ab hongay interest rates cut” keeps popping up. A leadership change can feel like a turning point, especially for borrowers who are tired of high costs. But a new chair doesn’t flip a switch. Warsh is often described as hawkish, yet he’s also been linked to arguments for lower rates, so markets are trying to read which version shows up in policy. The real test will be trust: if people think politics is steering the Fed, uncertainty alone can tighten financial conditions—even before the Fed does anything.
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