MISSION BRIEF
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On Wednesday, May 22, at a White House ceremony that ran eleven minutes, Kevin Warsh was sworn in as the 17th Chair of the Federal Reserve — and inherited a machine that was already pulling in two directions at once. Oil above $90. CPI confirmed at 4.2% year-over-year on June 10. A federal funds rate pinned at 3.50–3.75% through three consecutive holds. And a committee so fractured that four of its twelve voting members dissented at the April meeting — the most divided the FOMC had been since 1992 — not over whether to cut, but over whether the Fed's own language was too soft on inflation.
In four days, on June 16, Warsh chairs his first meeting. The market has largely priced a hold — CME FedWatch shows better than 80% odds of no move in June — but the December picture is a different map entirely. Seventy percent odds of at least one rate hike before year-end, per CME FedWatch as of June 9. That number was under 10% in January. The distance between those two data points is a war, a new chair, and a Bureau of Labor Statistics report that landed like a round.
The sequence matters more than any single print. The Iran conflict drove fuel higher starting in late February. That fed into April CPI. April fed into April FOMC minutes, released May 20, which showed a majority of officials now openly discussing whether hikes may be necessary if inflation persists. That fed into the May jobs report — blowout, well above expectations — which fed into Trump going on NBC's Meet the Press on Sunday to say, on the record, that raising rates would be wrong. Warsh watched all of it from a chair he had held for three weeks.
The trap Warsh walked into has a name. Stagflation: growth slowing, unemployment softening, inflation running at its highest in three years — all driven by an energy shock the Fed cannot fix by moving rates in either direction. Cut and you validate the inflation. Hike and you choke what's left of household spending. Hold and you watch the credibility of the institution bleed out one CPI print at a time. The April minutes were explicit: the "majority" of officials considered hikes if inflation persisted. That majority meets in four days, and the man at the head of the table was put there by a president who told the country this weekend that higher rates would be a mistake.
Powell agreed to stay on the Board for continuity. The room contains the man who built the last four years of policy and the man now responsible for the next four. Both of them know what the April minutes said. The press conference starts at 2:30 PM Eastern on June 17.
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THE OPERATION
Two clocks running
The first clock is the market's. CME FedWatch assigns nearly zero probability to a hike on June 17 — Warsh won't move in his first meeting, the logic goes, because new chairs don't open with a shock and the Hormuz ceasefire announced Thursday night, still unsigned and contested by Iranian officials, gives the committee a reason to hold and watch. Brent settled at $90.38 on Thursday, down nearly 3% on Trump's Oval Office announcement of a "great settlement" of the war, and oil is now roughly 20% off its 2026 highs. The market reads lower oil as lower inflation as lower pressure on the Fed.
The second clock is the data's. May CPI came in at 4.2% year-over-year — the highest reading since April 2023, confirmed by the Bureau of Labor Statistics on June 10. Core PCE is running at 3.2%. The Fed's target is 2.0%. That gap, 120 basis points on the headline, has been open for more than five years. Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack said last week this is "probably the fourth shock" in five years — pandemic, Russia-Ukraine, tariffs, now the Iran war — and each one has left inflation a little higher than it found it. The Fed has been looking through supply shocks for half a decade. The balance sheet of that decision is visible in every grocery receipt in the country.
Bank of America, as of early May, projects no rate cuts until the second half of 2027.
The two clocks diverge specifically on the dot plot — the FOMC's published projection of where rates will be at year-end — which Warsh will release alongside the June 17 decision. In March, the dots still penciled in one cut for 2026. If the new dots remove that cut, or if any dots move above the current rate, the market will read it as a signal that the committee is shifting from neutral to tightening. Two-year Treasury yields will reprice within the hour. Mortgage rates follow. J.P. Morgan Wealth Management told clients this week to expect Warsh to move the committee's language away from an easing bias toward a neutral stance — not a hike, but a closed door on cuts.
Central banks globally purchased 244 tonnes of gold in Q1 2026, per World Gold Council data released April 29. Poland's National Bank added 14 tonnes in April alone — its year-to-date total is now 45 tonnes, reserves at 595 tonnes. China has added to reserves for 18 consecutive months. Goldman Sachs holds a year-end target of $5,400 per ounce, reaffirmed in May. Gold closed at $4,165 on June 10 — 25% below its January 28 all-time high of $5,589. Sovereign buyers accumulating at $4,165 are not doing so because they expect the Fed to get inflation under control in time.
The ceasefire is unsigned. Iranian officials stated publicly on Thursday that no final decision had been reached. The IRGC struck a US base in Jordan and 21 Gulf targets on the same night Trump called it a "great settlement." An unsigned ceasefire with active missile exchanges is not a ceasefire. It is a price signal that markets have already traded through once before — and re-priced back the other way when the shooting resumed.
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The federal funds rate is 3.50–3.75%. A 30-year fixed mortgage is priced off the 10-year Treasury, which moves the day the FOMC shifts its language — not the day rates actually change. If Warsh's June 17 dot plot removes the cut projection and moves the committee to neutral, mortgage rates rise before the next Fed meeting. Bank of America's own analysts have said they don't expect rate relief until late 2027. That is seventeen months of a housing market that has already been locked up for three years by rates that were supposed to come down by now.
The inflation arithmetic is not abstract. PCE at 3.2% against a 2.0% target means that every dollar of savings is losing real purchasing power at a rate the Fed has now tolerated through five consecutive years of above-target prints. The grocery bill that went up in March when oil spiked does not come down when oil pulls back — the input cost runs through the distribution system on a 60- to 90-day lag, and the operators who repriced don't reprice back. May CPI at 4.2% captures some of that pass-through. June will capture more.
The Fed is meeting in four days with inflation at 4.2%, a new chair who was installed by the president and whose political patron said on Sunday that raising rates would be wrong, a committee that produced four dissents in April, and a ceasefire in the Middle East that the IRGC was actively violating at the time Trump announced it — and the reader's mortgage rate, grocery bill, and the real value of every dollar in their savings account will be set by what those twelve people write on a piece of paper in Washington on Tuesday afternoon. Their advisor will call it a hold. He will not mention the dot plot.
