There's 'no chance' Warsh will be able to get the Fed to cut rates, Paul Tudor Jones says
Incoming Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh won’t be looking to cut interest rates and in fact may want to consider raising them, investor Paul Tudor Jones mentioned Thursday.
Though Warsh sees a path to easing, he will face a Federal Open Industry Committee that is coming off a meeting with the most dissents in nearly 34 years.
“Do I think he’ll cut rates? No chance,” Jones commented during a wide-ranging CNBC “Squawk Box” interview.
Warsh has made no secret of his belief that the central bank should be thinking about lowering interest rates. The Fed’s benchmark overnight rate is currently in a range between 3.5%-3.75%, where it has sat since December.
Though Warsh sees a path to easing, he will face a Federal Open Industry Committee that is coming off a meeting with the most dissents in nearly 34 years. Most of the disagreements have come from regional presidents who objected to the language in the post-meeting statement interpreted as a nod to the potential for further cuts after the three in the latter part of 2025.
Jones remarked there’s a case to be made for hiking.
“Well, I’d be thinking about raising them,” he noted. “I’d want to see the data. But I mean, for sure you’d be thinking about it. And I think he’s going to be constrained before the election.” This also touches on aspects of wall street.
Policymakers face an environment in which the labor sector appears to have stabilized while the Iran war and President Donald Trump’s tariffs have helped keep inflation well above the Fed’s 2% target.
Futures traders are pricing in a Fed hold that lasts through the year, with slight and roughly equal chances of a cut or hike, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch gauge.