Fed set to hold US interest rates as investors focus on Warsh’s first Fed meeting

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The US Federal Reserve is widely expected to leave interest rates unchanged on Wednesday, but investors’ attention will be centred on new Chairman Kevin Warsh’s first press conference and whether policymakers reinforce a “higher for longer” interest rates narrative.

Policy hold expected as Fed enters new era

The US Federal Reserve is expected to leave interest rates on hold when policymakers report the decision from their June meeting on Wednesday, with markets instead focused on what new chair Kevin Warsh signals about the path of US monetary policy for the remainder of 2026.

Investors in the UK and across the globe will be scrutinising not only the Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC) policy statement, but also the closely watched Summary of Economic Projections (SEP), including the so-called “dot plot” of policymakers’ rate expectations.

The meeting marks Warsh’s first at the helm of the Fed and his first major opportunity to shape market expectations amid persistent inflation, a resilient labour market and ongoing geopolitical uncertainty.

Economists broadly expect the Fed to keep its benchmark rate unchanged in the range of 3.50%-3.75%, though debate remains over whether policymakers might strike a more hawkish tone and further reinforce a “higher for longer” stance on interest rates.

PIMCO: “first opportunity” for Warsh to set communications tone

Tiffany Wilding, Economist at PIMCO, said the focus would fall squarely on how Warsh communicates the Fed’s thinking.

“The press conference and SEP will be his first opportunity to put his stamp on Fed communications,” she said.

Wilding expects a hawkish shift in policymakers’ projections, with “a couple of 2026 dots showing hikes by year-end, with the median clustered around no change”.

However, she warned markets will be alert to any disconnect between a committee drifting more hawkishly and a chair whose own instincts “on inflation appear more constructive”.

PIMCO expects policymakers to leave rates unchanged at 3.50%-3.75%, while any discussion around shrinking the Fed’s balance sheet is likely to remain tentative.

“This meeting is too early for any change in policy,” Wilding said, adding Warsh would probably stay “guarded” on the topic.

SEP and dot plot in focus for “higher for longer” clues

Others believe the Fed’s updated economic projections may prove more important than the actual interest rate decision itself.

Naomi Fink, Chief Economist at Amova Asset Management, said: “The market expects the Fed to remain on hold at its June meeting; the real event is whether the Fed validates a ‘higher for longer’ thesis.”

Fink said investors would be closely watching whether the Fed’s 2026 median “dot plot” removes rate cuts entirely and how policymakers balance inflation concerns against softer underlying price pressures.

“The bigger signal may be the distribution of FOMC member views rather than the median,” she said.

She added that markets would also be looking for guidance on how the Fed interprets strong labour market data, moderating core inflation and geopolitical risks, particularly in relation to the US-Iran conflict.

Pictet: removal of easing bias likely

At Pictet Wealth Management, Xiao Cui, Senior Economist, also expects interest rates to remain unchanged but believes the Fed could subtly shift its tone.

“We expect the FOMC to keep the policy rate unchanged at 3.5–3.75%, removing its easing bias without introducing a tightening bias,” Cui said.

He expects the dot plot to point towards no rate cuts in 2026, while noting there remains uncertainty over whether Warsh will submit his own projection, given his long-standing criticism of forward guidance.

Warsh press conference: communication, not policy, is the real risk

For markets, however, it looks like the biggest test may be Warsh’s performance in his first press conference as Fed chair.

“We expect Warsh to downplay forward guidance, instead advocating patience on policy rates and inflation—leaning dovish relative to market pricing,” Cui said.

Still, he warned there remained “an elevated risk of gaffes in his first press conference that could be taken negatively by markets”.

Capital.com: inflation framing will drive reaction function debate

Daniela Hathorn, Senior Market Analyst at Capital.com, said Warsh was entering office at a difficult moment, with inflation remaining stubborn and economic growth proving resilient.

“The key question for investors is therefore not whether the Fed will react to lower oil prices today, but how Warsh frames the broader policy outlook,” Hathorn said.

“Markets are looking for clarity on whether the Fed views current inflation pressures as temporary and manageable, or whether policymakers still see a need for tighter policy later in the year.”

Schwab: markets focused on projections and messaging

Meanwhile, Joe Mazzola, Head Trading & Derivatives Strategist at Charles Schwab, said attention would centre on the Fed’s updated projections and commentary from its new chair.

“The key question is what new Chairman Kevin Warsh might say about the economy and rate policy. No rate change is expected, but the Fed’s fresh economic and rate projections loom large,” he said.

Outlook: signals matter more than the decision

Given that there seems to be little expectation of a surprise on US interest rates this week, markets appear increasingly aligned around one view: Wednesday’s decision may matter less than the signals Warsh sends about the Fed’s reaction function and the future direction of US monetary policy.

We’ll be bringing you details of the decision and analysis resulting from it, here on IFA Magazine on Wednesday evening, UK time.

Of course, for those of you who might be preparing to watch England kick off their campaign for the 2026 FIFA World Cup by playing Croatia, you might prefer to delay catching up on the latest Fed news until Thursday!!

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