Instead of directing financial markets with its policy moves, Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh wants the markets to inform the central bank.
"Financial market prices are probably the most important source of information to guide central bankers," Warsh said during a press conference on Wednesday. "But when all the financial markets are doing is reflecting back what we've said, then we're taking the most important source of information, and we're being blind to it."
Warsh said he wants the Fed to create a system where those blinders come off and the markets follow data they efficiently deem reliable.
"He wants to have financial markets help him see what they're thinking without biasing their opinion," said Wil Stith, senior bond portfolio manager at Wilmington Trust. "He wants markets to give [central bankers] a fresh read on risk, economic weakness potential, and inflation as opposed to all that feedback [being] biased by what the Fed has been telegraphing constantly."
That means stripping so-called forward guidance, a communication tool that signals the central bank's potential next move based on how the economy unfolds.
The shift harks back to former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan, whom Warsh invoked in his speech after being sworn in, and marks a significant move away from the previous approach of providing greater transparency into the central bank's thinking.
"Warsh regards market volatility as a price worth paying to get to the point at which the market forms an independent view of the appropriate rate path, but it is not clear this is what is happening," said Krishna Guha, head of central banking policy at Evercore ISI.
Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh's press conference appears on a screen on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on June 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Richard Drew) · AP Photo/Richard Drew
Guha worries the market is responding more to what it thinks it is learning about the Fed — that both Warsh and the rest of the central bank are more hawkish than thought — so it should price in rate hikes.
"Warsh could get caught — perhaps willingly and deliberately — in a credibility trap of his own making," Guha added.
If the next few inflation prints do not show improvement sufficient to cool market hike bets, Guha said Warsh may have to push for a hike by September — possibly even in July — or risk his own credibility.
Warsh made clear this week that the Fed wants to get back to 2% inflation. And while he did not offer any new insight on monetary policy, the outlook for the economy, or interest rates beyond the official statement, nine of his colleagues penciled in at least one rate hike this year.
The result: a surge of hike bets with a hike now fully priced by October.