The Fed held rates steady at 3.5-3.75% on Wednesday. That wasn't the news.
The news was the statement itself - or what was missing from it.
Kevin Warsh's first policy statement as Fed chair came in at 132 words, down from 341 in Powell's last statement in April.
That's not a trim - it's a rewrite of how the Fed talks to markets.
That's no accident. Warsh took the chair seat last month after years of saying the Fed had become too predictable and too wordy.
What Got Cut
The biggest change was forward guidance - the Fed's signal about what it plans to do at future meetings.
Markets use that signal to price in rate moves before they happen, so any shift in the language gets read line by line on Wall Street.
Gone: the phrase about "the extent and timing of additional adjustments," which markets had read in April as a hint at future rate cuts.
Also gone: the paragraph promising the Fed would weigh "a wide range of information" before deciding what to do next.
In their place, a single line: "The Committee will deliver price stability."
Warsh's case has always been the same: telling markets what you're going to do makes it harder to change course when the data shifts.
It also pushes the Fed into fixes that arrive too late. [NEEDS MANUAL VERIFICATION]
His first statement as chair made that view real.
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Why It Matters For Rates
The one line the Fed kept tilts the message toward inflation, not jobs. "Deliver price stability" is a promise about prices - not jobs.
The signal: rates may stay higher for longer than markets had been betting on.
The Middle East conflict is pushing energy prices up, while inflation is still above the Fed's 2% target. That backdrop makes the Fed's new bias matter even more.
Yet markets had already been bracing for rates to stay put - and increasingly for a hike later this year, not a cut. The new statement, focused only on prices, reinforces that hawkish tilt.
What To Watch
The statement passed 12-0. The rate decision didn't.
Stephen Miran wanted a quarter-point cut, while three other members - Beth Hammack, Neel Kashkari, and Lorie Logan - backed the hold but didn't want any hint of easing in the statement.
That's a committee with at least four members not fully aligned on Warsh's new approach.
The next meeting will show whether the cuts to the statement stick - or whether the old language starts creeping back in.
For investors, the bigger question is whether a quieter Fed means bigger market swings around every new data release - and whether those swings create more chances or just more noise.
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