Fed Chair Kevin Warsh Dropped the Hammer With This 11-Word Statement at His Swearing-in Ceremony -- and Wall Street Isn't Ready for It

Source The Motley Fool

Key Points

  • Jerome Powell's term as Fed chair ended on May 15, with President Trump's handpicked successor, Kevin Warsh, officially taking the reins.

  • At Warsh's swearing-in ceremony, he dropped a blunt statement that points to meaningful changes at America's foremost financial institution.

  • However, the new Fed chair's proposals come with potentially dire consequences for the stock market.

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A new era has officially begun for America's foremost financial institution, the Federal Reserve. Now-former Fed Chair Jerome Powell's second term ended on May 15. Following the swearing-in ceremony of President Donald Trump's handpicked successor, Kevin Warsh, on May 22, the ball is officially in his court.

For the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI), S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC), and Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX: ^IXIC), it represents a period of historic uncertainty. It may not take much to upend a historically expensive stock market -- and Warsh's comments at his White House swearing-in ceremony point to imminent changes at the Fed.

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Jerome Powell speaking with reporters following a Federal Open Market Committee meeting.

The Federal Reserve that investors became accustomed to under Jerome Powell is about to change. Image source: Official Federal Reserve Photo.

A central bank overhaul is coming, and stocks may pay the price

At the White House, Warsh praised President Trump's energy and paid homage to his Fed chair predecessor, Alan Greenspan. But most importantly, his five-minute speech dropped the hammer on what's to come with one 11-word remark:

To fulfill this mission, I will lead a reform-oriented Federal Reserve.

Warsh's mission, as well as that of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), is price stability and maximum employment. To achieve these ends, the new Fed chair previously outlined two significant changes he'd like to employ at the central bank.

To start with, Powell's successor has been persistently critical of the Fed's ballooned balance sheet, composed primarily of U.S. Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities. Between August 2008 and March 2022, the central bank's balance sheet grew tenfold to almost $9 trillion. Today, it sits at a little above $6.7 trillion.

Kevin Warsh wants to revamp the Fed by selling most of its assets and returning the central bank to a passive observer, rather than an active market participant.

Regardless of whether you agree or disagree with this view, this plan comes with potentially serious consequences for the stock market. Given that bond prices and yields are inversely correlated, selling trillions of dollars of Treasury bonds would be expected to depress their price, raise yields, and boost borrowing costs. Higher lending rates won't make Wall Street happy -- especially with debt financing the artificial intelligence data center build-out.

Secondly, the new Fed chair wants to change how you think about inflation and interest rate forecasts. During his testimony before the Senate Banking Committee, Warsh introduced his own definition of inflation:

I believe that price stability should be a change in prices such that no one's talking about it.

Since January 2012, the FOMC's long-term inflation target has stood at 2%. Warsh wants these rigid targets removed, including the possibility of ditching the dot-plot, in favor of subjective terminology that would afford the FOMC more liberty to act.

On the one hand, the Fed may be more proactive than reactive if the very definition of inflation is altered.

Then again, it's the rigid 2% long-term inflation target and the transparency of the dot-plot that make the central bank predictable and give America's leading financial institution credibility. Removing this predictability threatens to pull the rug out from beneath the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite.

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