The Fed Holds Rates — but Signals Hikes in Warsh’s Hawkish Debut
The Fed held rates at 3.50–3.75% at Kevin Warsh’s first meeting (June 17, 2026) but flipped its dot plot toward hikes amid higher inflation forecasts.
TL;DR — The Federal Reserve held interest rates at 3.50%–3.75% at Kevin Warsh’s first meeting as chair (June 17, 2026) but flipped its "dot plot" toward hikes, with half of officials now projecting at least one increase by year-end amid higher inflation forecasts.
The Fed stood pat on rates — but the bigger news was the new chair’s hawkish tilt. On June 17, 2026, Kevin Warsh chaired his first meeting.
The decision
The Federal Reserve held its benchmark rate at 3.50%–3.75% in a unanimous 12–0 vote at Kevin Warsh’s first meeting as chair. But the "dot plot" flipped: where March’s projections implied a cut, June’s implied net hikes, with 9 of 18 officials projecting at least one increase by year-end. Forecasts turned more hawkish — PCE inflation revised up to 3.6%, unemployment 4.3%, real GDP 2.2%.
| March | June | |
|---|---|---|
| Policy signal | implied cut | implied hike |
| PCE inflation | lower | 3.6% |
| Rate (held) | — | 3.50–3.75% |
What they said
"We recognize that inflation has been running well ahead of the Fed’s long-stated inflation goal of 2%." — Kevin Warsh, Chair, Federal Reserve
Why it matters
- A regime change. Warsh’s Fed reads as more hawkish than the prior Powell-era guidance.
- Markets repriced. Traders moved to price an October hike rather than cuts.
- Inflation is the worry again. Upgraded price forecasts drove the shift.
FAQ
What did the Fed decide in June 2026?
It held its benchmark rate at 3.50%–3.75% in a unanimous 12–0 vote on June 17, 2026 — Kevin Warsh’s first meeting as chair — but shifted its dot plot toward hikes, with 9 of 18 officials projecting at least one increase by year-end.
Why is this seen as a hawkish shift?
In March, the Fed’s projections implied a rate cut; in June they implied hikes, alongside higher inflation forecasts (PCE revised up to 3.6%). Markets responded by pricing in a potential October increase.
Sources
Image: Kevin Warsh (Federal Reserve) by Federal Reserve — Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.
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