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Trump picks a reinvented Warsh to lead the Federal Reserve

Catarina Saraiva, Bloomberg News on

Published in Political News

President Donald Trump said he intends to nominate Kevin Warsh to be the next chair of the Federal Reserve, according to a post on his Truth Social platform.

“I have known Kevin for a long period of time, and have no doubt that he will go down as one of the GREAT Fed Chairmen, maybe the best,” Trump wrote. “On top of everything else, he is ‘central casting,’ and he will never let you down.”

Warsh, who served on the U.S. central bank’s Board of Governors from 2006 to 2011 and has previously advised Trump on economic policy, would succeed Jerome Powell when his term at the helm ends in May. It marks a comeback for Warsh, 55, whom the president passed over for the top job in 2017 when he selected Powell.

If confirmed by the Senate, the former Fed governor will take charge of U.S. monetary policy at a time when many economists and investors see its traditional insulation from elected officials as being under threat from the White House. Warsh aligned himself with the president in 2025 by arguing publicly for lower interest rates, going against his longstanding reputation as an inflation hawk.

The dollar held gains and U.S. stock futures remained lower after Trump confirmed reports he would pick Warsh. While Warsh has echoed Trump’s calls for lower borrowing costs and revamping the central bank, traders see him as ultimately more inclined to guard against rising price pressures given how much he worried about rising inflation when at the Fed.

“The two big questions are who’s the real Kevin Warsh and does that evolve?” said Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. “I presume at the outset he is going to be dovish, but does that persist as we move forward a year or two or more?”

Warsh is currently an adviser at Stanley Druckenmiller’s Duquesne Family Office, a fellow at the conservative Hoover Institution think tank and a lecturer at Stanford Business School.

In a months-long selection process, Warsh ended up prevailing over fellow finalists Christopher Waller, a current Fed governor; Kevin Hassett, the National Economic Council director; and BlackRock Inc. executive Rick Rieder. Trump lauded those three in a post saying “they all would have been outstanding, and have a great and unlimited future with “TRUMP.”

Carney endorsement

Warsh won a prominent overseas endorsement Friday morning from veteral central banker and current Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney. He’s “a fantastic choice to lead the world’s most important central bank at this pivotal moment,” Carney said in a post.

During his time at the Fed, Warsh was consistently wary of inflation and often supported higher interest rates. Last year, however, he echoed Trump’s view that rates could be significantly lower. A willingness to cut rates is seen as a litmus test for the next chair, worrying Fed watchers that this would undermine the central bank’s independence.

Warsh’s selection doesn’t guarantee a change in policy at the Fed. Interest rates are set by a majority vote of the 12-member Federal Open Market Committee, which is composed of seven Fed governors and five of the 12 presidents of regional Fed banks. The FOMC held its benchmark rate steady this week after lowering it three consecutive times at the end of 2025, and rates remain well above where Trump has said he wants them.

His Senate confirmation may also be complicated by a recently-announced Department of Justice probe into the central bank. On Jan. 9, the Fed received subpoenas regarding Powell’s 2025 congressional testimony about a building renovation project. Powell issued an extraordinary videotaped statement decrying the probe, and several Republican lawmakers came to the central bank’s defense, with one, North Carolina’s Thom Tillis, pledging to withhold support for any Fed nominee until the legal matter was settled.

Confirmation process

 

Following Trump’s announcement on Friday, Tillis said on social media that he saw Warsh as a “qualified nominee with a deep understanding of monetary policy.” However, he made clear he would not back Warsh’s nomination “until the DOJ’s inquiry into Chairman Powell is fully and transparently resolved.”

Tillis is a member of the Senate Banking Committee, which will vet the nomination. Tim Scott, who chairs that panel, said he looks forward to “leading a thoughtful, timely confirmation process.”

Trump has been at odds with Powell almost since the current Fed chair took the helm in 2018. In 2020, the president lamented selecting Powell over Warsh for the position: “Kevin, I could have used you a little bit here. Why weren’t you more forceful when you wanted that job?” he said at the time.

Warsh has advised Trump on economic policy as far back as his first presidential campaign. Since leaving the Fed, Warsh has frequently criticized the institution, saying recently it needs a regime change and proposing a plan for lower interest rates.

“It’s about breaking some heads, because the way they’ve been doing business is not working,” Warsh told Fox News in July.

Warsh was appointed to the Fed’s Board of Governors by President George W. Bush in 2006 after stints in the Bush White House and, before that, on Wall Street. While he wasn’t widely known when he joined the central bank, his experience and contacts in financial markets and in the banking world proved pivotal during the 2008 financial crisis.

His appointment made him the youngest person to ever serve as a Fed governor, and among the richest. He is married to Jane Lauder, the daughter of prominent Republican donor Ronald Lauder — the son of makeup scion Estee Lauder and a former Wharton School classmate of Trump’s. Lauder donated $5 million in March to MAGA Inc., Trump’s super political action committee.

Warsh resigned from the Fed in 2011 shortly after it embarked on a second round of bond purchases to shore up a crisis-scarred economy. He has since been critical of the Fed’s balance-sheet expansion, and now argues that by more aggressively reducing the size of it, the central bank would also be able to cut interest rates more.

That openness to lower rates marks a change for Warsh, who was once so cautious about inflation that he called for higher rates even in the depths of the financial crisis.

While the Fed delivered three quarter-point interest-rate cuts last year — in September, October and December — Powell said on Wednesday there was broad support this week for leaving rates unchanged amid signs of some stabilization in the labor market.

Bets in futures markets show investors expect rates to drop to about 3% by the end of 2026, from the range of 3.5-3.75% where they are now, still far above where Trump would like them.

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—With assistance from Simon Kennedy.


©2026 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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