Kevin Warsh, the Federal Reserve’s new chairman, doubled down on the central bank’s commitment to both price stability and maximum employment in a statement released on July 9. The word he used was “unwavering,” which in Fed-speak is about as emphatic as it gets.
From Wall Street critic to the big chair
Warsh was confirmed by the Senate in May 2026 with a narrow 51-45 vote, replacing Jerome Powell, whose tenure was defined by the most aggressive rate-hiking cycle in decades.
Warsh isn’t a stranger to the building, though. He served as a Fed governor from 2006 to 2011, navigating the institution through the global financial crisis. That experience shaped his preference for data-driven policymaking over the kind of forward guidance that Powell leaned on heavily.
Warsh’s most eyebrow-raising disclosure during his confirmation process had nothing to do with monetary philosophy. He revealed personal investments in crypto assets, including positions in Ethereum and various DeFi protocols. He pledged to divest from all of them, which is standard procedure for government officials.






