- Goldman Sachs says replacing the Fed Chair won’t automatically trigger rate cuts
- Kevin Warsh denied any commitment to cutting rates, shifting market expectations
- FOMC structure means policy depends on committee consensus, not one person
Markets spent a good part of early 2026 assuming a simple chain reaction, Trump picks a new Fed chair, rate cuts follow shortly after. It sounded clean, almost too clean, and Goldman Sachs never really bought into that idea from the start.

Now, with Kevin Warsh stepping into the spotlight, that assumption is starting to unravel, and maybe faster than expected.
What Warsh Actually Said Changed Everything
During his Senate confirmation hearing, Warsh pushed back on the idea that he was stepping in to deliver immediate rate cuts. He made it clear that Trump never asked him to commit to lowering rates, which, given the political noise around the issue, landed harder than it might seem at first.
That one statement forced markets to rethink expectations almost instantly, with projections now pointing to maybe one cut in all of 2026, if that.
The Fed Isn’t a One-Person Decision
This is where Goldman’s argument really starts to make sense. The Federal Open Market Committee isn’t run by one person, it’s a 12-member group where each vote carries equal weight.
Even if Warsh leans more dovish, he still has to convince a majority of members who are looking at the same inflation data, and not all of them are convinced rate cuts are the right move anytime soon.

Inflation Pressures Complicate the Picture
There’s also the macro backdrop, which isn’t exactly helping the case for easing policy. Rising oil prices, driven by geopolitical tensions, are pushing inflation expectations higher, with forecasts suggesting CPI could climb toward 3% by year-end.
Cutting rates into that kind of environment would be risky, and historically, those are the kinds of decisions central bankers tend to avoid.
A Reality Check for the Market
What this all adds up to is a bit of a reset in expectations. The idea that a leadership change alone would shift monetary policy quickly now looks overly optimistic, maybe even naive in hindsight.
Goldman’s view, that the committee matters more than the chair, is starting to look less like a contrarian take and more like the baseline reality. For markets that were pricing in multiple cuts, the adjustment might take some time, and it probably won’t be comfortable.
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