Washington: What to Watch Now

Key takeaways

  • Kevin Warsh was officially sworn in as 17th Federal Reserve chair on May 22. Warsh is likely to build consensus at the Fed rather than push for aggressive action to cut rates.
  • Senators left town for the annual Memorial Day recess on May 21 without voting on the $72 billion immigration enforcement bill, punting the debate to early June.
  • On May 20, the House of Representatives approved a revised housing bill, the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, by a 396-13 bipartisan vote.
  • Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Commissioner Hester Peirce announced that she will leave the agency in November. Her departure will leave only Chair Paul Atkins and Republican Commissioner Mark Uyeda at the agency, which is supposed to have five members, including two Democrats.

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas administered the oath of office to Kevin Warsh in a White House ceremony on May 22, officially swearing in Warsh as the 17th Federal Reserve chair. Here are some key things to keep in mind as Warsh takes the helm:

  • Fed independence. While President Donald J. Trump has been relentless for more than a year in calling for the Fed to cut interest rates, he struck a different tone during comments at the ceremony. "I want Kevin to be totally independent," the president said. "I want him to be independent and just do a great job. Don't look at me, don't look at anybody, just do your own thing and do a great job."
  • Little support for rate cuts. Warsh, who served as a Fed governor from 2006 to 2011, returns to the central bank at a delicate time. Inflation has been creeping upward and the voting members of the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) do not seem inclined to support rate cuts anytime soon. In fact, some members have indicated that they think a rate hike may end up being the Fed's next monetary policy move. Warsh is likely to take time to build consensus at the Fed rather than push for aggressive action soon.
  • Powell stays, Miran departs. With former Chair Jerome Powell taking the unusual step of remaining on the seven-member Board of Governors, Stephen Miran formally resigned from the board so that Warsh could fill that seat. Miran, who joined the board last September to fill the remaining few months of an unexpired term, had dissented from every FOMC vote since, always in favor of steeper rate cuts. His departure means that the Fed has lost its biggest rate-cut champion, further complicating Warsh's ability to push for lower interest rates anytime soon.
  • Next meeting in June. Warsh's first meeting as chair will be June 16 and 17, and while the FOMC is expected to leave rates unchanged, Warsh's first comments on the central bank's deliberations are likely to be closely scrutinized, particularly when it comes to his vision for the Fed's communications. He has said that he thinks the Fed overcommunicates and that he may not hold a news conference after each Fed meeting, as Jerome Powell has done since 2019. He has also said he plans to reduce the Fed's balance sheet, though that is likely to be a slow process so as not to rattle the markets.

Read more: Tracking the Four Horsemen of the Labor Market