Warsh Says Inflation Risks Are Down, Vows Price Stability

Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh said price risks have come down in recent weeks, while repeating his determination to bring inflation back to the US central bank’s 2% target.

“Expectations of inflation over the first four weeks of this period have come down, inflation risks have come down,” Warsh said Wednesday at the European Central Bank’s annual Forum on Central Banking in Sintra, Portugal. He doubled down on a message from his first press conference as Fed chairman last month that the central bank will deliver price stability.

Two-year Treasury yields fell to their lows of the session after Warsh’s remarks, and were around 4.15% at 10:25 a.m. in New York.

Warsh didn’t cite the specific price indicators he was monitoring. The most recent reading for the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge showed a 4.1% jump from a year before, with core prices, excluding food and energy, up 3.4%. Energy and gasoline prices, however, have plunged in recent weeks as the US and Iran engaged in peace talks.

“We’re going to deliver price stability in the US, that’s what this committee has signed up to do, and our objective is to do that,” he said. “Tactics, the strategy and the rest, that’s still to come,” Warsh said.

Fed Independence

Warsh also emphasized the Fed’s autonomy in determining the proper policy course — in the face of consistent calls by President Donald Trump for slashing interest rates.

“We’ve been an independent central bank for a very long time. We’re going to be an independent central bank at this moment and you’re going to see no changes on that,” he said in a panel discussion at the ECB conference.

Warsh repeated he isn’t going to offer “forward guidance” with regard to upcoming interest-rate policy. Asked specifically whether a rate hike is on the table at this month’s meeting, he said the panel moderator was “trying to get me to break this rule” on foreswearing forward guidance. “She’s going to fail.”

“We’re going to chart a new course,” Warsh said. “I want us to have a good family fight when we meet in four weeks,” he said, referring to the next policy decision.