Fed's Warsh heads to Congress after tentative steps away from Trump
TLT•No clear lean to rate cuts so far
Warsh has shown no signs that a rate cut will happen soon.
"I agree that he got the president's support by giving him dovish signals," said Samuel Tombs, chief U.S. economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics. "The counterpoint is that now that Warsh is in position, he has the luxury of taking a long, impartial view ... Powell successfully showed how independent a Fed chair can be, how political interference can only get so far. I'm sure Warsh has one eye on who Trump's successor might be," with his legacy and possible reappointment both at stake.
If anything, Warsh has begun talking in more conditional terms about some of the things, like artificial intelligence, that before his nomination he said could lower inflation and lead to lower rates.
The monetary policy report submitted to Congress last week ahead of his testimony noted that AI investment is pushing up some prices, and other Fed policymakers have noted how it may be feeding a jump in software costs that is adding inflationary pressure from a new direction.




