Sizing Up the Federal Reserve Chair in Waiting

In a widely anticipated move, US President Donald Trump announced on January 30 his intention to nominate Kevin Warsh as the next chair of the Federal Reserve. Markets have generally viewed Warsh as a safe choice based on his experience as a member of the Fed Board of Governors from 2006 to 2011 and subsequent career in finance and public economics.

Warsh has been widely praised for his liaison work between the Fed and Wall Street while serving as a Fed Governor during the global financial crisis, but his record on monetary policy is less highly regarded. As the economy struggled in the wake of the crisis, Warsh was primarily concerned about the risk of inflation—even as unemployment pushed near 10%—and indeed, over the next decade the primary policy concern turned out to be inflation consistently running below target.

Hawkish Monetary Policy Reputation…with Nuances

If the Senate confirms Warsh, he’ll take the open governor’s seat and become chair when Jay Powell’s term ends in May. Warsh is considered a monetary policy hawk based on his views when he was on the Board of Governors and most of his public remarks since. That said, he has advocated rate cuts recently based on his view that tariffs won’t cause lasting inflation.

Warsh’s recent pivot on rates does leave some question about his independence, but he has generally couched his argument in economic terms. Because he’s generally credible, we expect that he’ll be able to persuade the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) to cut rates later this year. We believe that his nomination makes modest easing more likely; we expect 50 basis points of rate cuts in 2026. At the same time, his nomination makes irresponsible rate cuts less likely, and we don’t think that his appointment demands an added risk premium in asset markets.

A Focus on Longer-Term Fed Reform

The most consistent through line in Warsh’s public commentary has been his belief that the Fed’s balance sheet is too big. He was skeptical of quantitative easing in his time at the Fed, and that hasn’t faded. In shorthand, he views the Fed’s balance-sheet policy as an enabler of irresponsible fiscal policy.