Warsh Is Taking the Fed Out of the Guidance Business

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The immediate policy question remains unresolved. Headline inflation has eased from the shock of the Iran conflict and the surge in fuel prices, but core inflation remains well above target. The economy has not yet shown enough weakness to force the Fed’s hand, while the prospect of a more productive, AI-supported supply side gives Warsh a plausible argument for patience rather than pre-emptive tightening.Takeaways Warsh reaffirmed Fed independence and made clear that inflation above 2% will not become the new comfort zone.His comments that inflation expectations and risks have eased were dovish at the margin, but they do not amount to a promise of easier policy.The Fed appears to be moving away from detailed forward guidance, with the dot plot and broader communication framework now under review.The market may get fewer verbal breadcrumbs from the Fed, placing more weight back on the macro data rather than central-bank theatre.There was a time when central bankers treated every public appearance as an opportunity to leave a trail of breadcrumbs for markets to follow. A carefully chosen adjective here, a reference to “some further progress” there, and by the end of the day the rates market had built an entire policy path around a raised eyebrow.Kevin Warsh appears to be taking a different approach. His message at Sintra was not that the Fed is suddenly soft on inflation, nor that a rate hike is on or off the table. It was more fundamental than that. The Fed will remain independent, the 2% target still matters, and the institution is not about to lower its standards simply because the White House would prefer cheaper money.“We’ve been an independent central bank for a very long time, we’re going to be an independent central bank at this moment and you’re going to see no changes on that,” Warsh told the gathering of central bankers.That matters because the market had spent much of the past six months trying to work out whether the new chair would be a more dovish extension of the administration, or a central banker with his own operating manual. The answer, at least so far, is that Warsh is not interested in being reduced to either caricature. He is not promising a mechanical hawkish reaction function, but he is equally not giving investors permission to assume that inflation above target will be tolerated for political convenience.The key shift is that Warsh seems less interested in encouraging Federal Reserve verbal gymnastics and more interested in putting the burden back where it belongs: on the macro. That is not necessarily a bad thing. Markets had become accustomed to treating the Fed as a weather vane, a highly inaccurate one at that, spinning with every payroll number, inflation print, and post-FOMC speech. Warsh appears to want the institution to be more of a compass. Less commentary, fewer pre-announced turns, and a clearer focus on whether the underlying economy is actually delivering price stability.That does not mean the message from Sintra was outright hawkish. In fact, the market heard two important dovish notes. Warsh said inflation expectations had eased over the first four weeks since the June meeting and that inflation risks had come down, not overly surprising, mind you, as oil prices had dropped like a stone. He also leaned into the longer-run disinflationary potential of AI, arguing that an expanding supply side could have “huge implications for monetary policy.””Treasury yields, the dollar and gold all moved lower after Warsh’s remarks, at least for the day, with the two-year yield slipping to around 4.14%. But the reaction needs to be read carefully. Positioning had already become skewed toward a more hawkish Warsh heading into Sintra after the June hawk feast, so part of the move was simply the market rolling back some of the more extreme rate-hike tail risks. When too many investors are reading the same script from the same side of the boat, it does not take much for the deck to tilt the other way.The bigger message is that Warsh is trying to separate the inflation objective from the communication circus around it. He made clear that anyone expecting the Fed to become comfortable with inflation above 2% would be disappointed. At the same time, he declined to offer a clean signal on what the Fed might do at its next meeting, saying he wanted policymakers to have “a good family fight” behind closed doors before reaching a decision.For traders, that is a meaningful change in tone. The old framework encouraged markets to hang on every word and reverse-engineer the committee’s next move weeks in advance. The new framework may offer fewer clues, more room for genuine debate, and greater dependence on incoming macro data. The Fed is not becoming opaque, but it may become less eager to hand the market an answer sheet before the exam.The structural changes Warsh is considering reinforce that point. His five task forces are reviewing communications, the balance sheet, data sources, productivity and jobs, and the inflation framework. He has suggested that the Fed should make greater use of real-time data over the next nine to twelve months, reducing its reliance on government surveys that he believes suffer from measurement problems and declining relevance.He also hinted that the dot plot may not survive in its present form. “There will still be dots for a short time, at the very least, but we have a task force for that, and we’ll revisit it,” he said. That is potentially a much bigger deal than the market is treating it as. The dots have become a kind of central-bank horoscope, often read with more confidence than they deserve. Removing or reducing their importance would force investors to spend less time trading the Fed’s forecasts and more time trading the economy itself.The appointment of former Bank of England Governor Mervyn King to co-chair the communications task force points in the same direction. King spent much of his career trying to make central banking more transparent without pretending that economists could forecast the future with false precision. His famous Maradona theory of interest rates was built around the idea that central bankers can influence outcomes by convincing markets of their likely direction, rather than constantly zigzagging through every obstacle in public.Warsh may be trying to restore some of that discipline. Less public choreography. More institutional credibility. Fewer speeches that invite traders to trade the commas. That could mean more policy surprises in the short term, especially for markets that have grown dependent on heavy forward guidance. But it could also produce a healthier pricing process over time.The immediate policy question remains unresolved. Headline inflation has eased from the shock of the Iran conflict and the surge in fuel prices, but core inflation remains well above target. The economy has not yet shown enough weakness to force the Fed’s hand, while the prospect of a more productive, AI-supported supply side gives Warsh a plausible argument for patience rather than pre-emptive tightening.For now, the Fed is still telling markets that inflation is the destination, but Warsh is removing some of the road signs. That may frustrate investors who want every rate decision telegraphed months in advance. Yet after years of markets trading the Fed’s language almost as aggressively as its policy, putting the focus back on growth, prices, labour and productivity may be exactly the reset the institution needs.