Kevin Warsh May Skip Fed Dot Plot Submission, Wall Street Watchers Say



The Federal Reserve is set to release its latest dot plot on Wednesday, outlining officials’ interest-rate expectations.
According to Jin10, CNBC reported that most Wall Street Federal Reserve watchers expect new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh not to take part in the dot plot, either because he does not feel ready or because he dislikes the tool.
Warsh has previously said he opposes the dot plot and other forms of forward guidance, arguing that such approaches constrain the Fed’s decision-making flexibility. If Warsh declines to provide his rate projection, it would run counter to roughly 14 years of post-financial-crisis practice and could distance him from other Fed officials who support the communication method.
However, the report said that for Warsh—who has pledged to fundamentally reform how the institution operates—refusing to submit a dot plot projection could be an effective first step.
“In my view, he most likely does not want to submit an interest-rate forecast,” said Bill English, a former head of monetary policy at the Fed and now a professor at Yale University. English added that other committee members may also dislike the dot plot and could be willing to do the same.