Fed Chair Warsh Skips Rate Forecast, Markets Price First 2026 Hike

What You Need to Know
- Kevin Warsh’s second Fed meeting as chair scheduled for July 28-29, 2026, treated as live rate hike decision.
- Nine of nineteen Fed officials now expect at least one rate increase in 2026; median forecast rose to 3.8%.
- Warsh omitted his own rate projection from dot plot, removing market anchor and creating pricing uncertainty instead of direction.
- CME FedWatch odds for July hike already exceeded 70%, with press conference potentially mattering more than the decision itself.
Kevin Warsh’s second Federal Reserve meeting as chair is set for July 28 and 29, 2026, and markets are already treating it as a live hike decision. Nine of nineteen Fed officials now expect at least one rate increase in 2026, the median rate forecast jumped from 3.4% to 3.8% at the June meeting, and Warsh declined to submit his own rate projection entirely.
That omission is the detail worth sitting with. When a Fed chair skips the dot plot, it removes the anchor the market normally uses to read intent, and it leaves traders pricing uncertainty rather than direction. Bitcoin has dropped roughly 4% over the past week to around $59,800, pressured by spot ETF outflows, a stronger dollar, and a rate environment that is tightening in expectations even before any official move. The last time rate expectations shifted this sharply against crypto was late 2021, when the Fed’s pivot toward tightening began unwinding the bull run that had carried Bitcoin to its then-all-time high. The setup is not identical, but the transmission mechanism is the same: rising real rates compress risk appetite, and crypto, which has tracked the Nasdaq far more than its own on-chain fundamentals since 2020, absorbs that compression first.
CME FedWatch odds for a hike at the July meeting have already climbed past 70%, which means the market has largely priced a move, and the press conference at 2:30 p.m. Eastern on the 29th may matter more than the decision itself.
Warsh’s hawkish tone at the June meeting, his first as chair, was a genuine surprise to traders who had expected continuity with Powell’s more cautious posture. He also opened five policy task forces covering areas including the inflation framework and how frequently officials publish rate projections, which means the institutional mechanics of Fed communication are themselves in flux. For Bitcoin and broader crypto markets, that ambiguity is its own headwind: ETF flows, which have become the clearest institutional signal in this cycle, tend to soften when forward guidance is thin and the dollar is firm. A confirmed hike in July would likely push Bitcoin back toward and potentially below $60,000, a level it has already been testing.
July 29 is only Warsh’s second meeting in the chair, and he arrives without a dot of his own on the board and with five internal reviews still open. The rate decision lands at 2 p.m. Eastern. What he says thirty minutes later will tell markets considerably more than the number itself.
0 Comments