Fed Chair Kevin Warsh held rates steady in his debut FOMC meeting but delivered a sharply hawkish surprise, with nine of 18 participants projecting a 2026 rate hike and the statement stripping out its easing bias.
The Federal Reserve left the federal funds rate unchanged at 3.50%-3.75% on June 17, 2026 — the fourth consecutive hold, fully priced by markets.
Statement Shifts to Neutral
The FOMC removed previous references to “additional rate adjustments,” adopting a purely data-dependent neutral stance.
This marks a clear policy pivot amid persistent inflation hovering around 4.2% YoY.
Nine of 18 FOMC participants now pencil in at least one rate hike for 2026, a dramatic shift from prior projections that leaned toward cuts or extended holds.
This validates warnings from Citadel Securities about rising September hike risks fueled by strong wages, resilient demand, supply strains, and AI-driven investment.
Warsh’s Debut Under Scrutiny
In his first press conference, Warsh leaned into his preference for a “quieter” Fed with reduced forward guidance.
Fidelity managers had warned of potential bond market volatility from tone uncertainty, early reactions showed higher Treasury yields and USD gains.
The outcome challenges dovish expectations tied to Warsh’s appointment and highlights a vigilant committee focused on inflation control.
Market Impact: Stocks and Bonds Sell Off
Wall Street turned lower after the decision as investors digested the more hawkish tone.
The S&P 500 fell 0.6%, the Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.7%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 160 points (0.3%) by mid-afternoon.
Treasury yields climbed on the news. The 2-year yield rose nearly 11 basis points to 4.153%, while the 10-year yield increased 4 basis points to 4.469%.
The outcome highlights ongoing division risks at the Fed amid the Iran-related energy shock, which is driving both higher inflation and growth uncertainty.
The post Warsh Hawkish Shock: 9 Fed Officials Signal 2026 Rate Hike appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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