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Financial Industry Insights from Advisors Asset Management
On June 22, 2026
Kevin Warsh Ushers in New Regime at the End
All eyes were on Kevin Warsh’s debut press conference as Federal Reserve (Fed) Chair, which confirmed a “hawkish tilt” at the central bank. He indicated the Federal Reserve will scale back forward guidance and other market communications. Chair Warsh also announced task forces to explore further changes to the Fed’s approach.
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) recalibrates forecast to account for Iran war-related disruption
The FOMC voted unanimously to keep the Fed Funds Rate unchanged at 3.5% to 3.75%, as expected.
The central bank’s “dot plot” projections reflected nine members estimating at least one hike by the end of 2026. This was a change from the median expectation of a full rate cut that the committee previously forecasted in March (Figure 1).
Figure 1: The FOMC moved to project no rate moves in 2026
Source: Insight Investment, June 2026
The committee’s quarterly inflation projections also changed to reflect Iran war-related disruption. The Fed’s median estimate for headline Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) inflation in 2026 rose from 2.7% to 3.6%, and its core PCE estimate rose from 2.7% to 3.3%.
However, the committee’s growth and unemployment forecasts were not significantly changed.
Could a new era under Warsh provide opportunities for active managers?
Kevin Warsh’s debut as Federal Reserve Chair came at a time when markets had gone from pricing in rate cuts at the last meeting in April, to pricing in rate hikes (Figure 2).
Figure 2: Markets have gone from pricing rate cuts to rate hikes since the Iran war started
Warsh confirmed the central bank’s hawkish tilt
Warsh emphasized “the committee will deliver price stability.” The Fed’s official statement continued to note “elevated” inflation related to “supply shocks” due to the conflict in the Middle East. It also added new language alluding to Artificial Intelligence (AI)-related capex trends, noting “Productivity growth and capital investment are strong.” The committee also updated a statement to note job gains “have kept pace with the workforce” instead of “remained low.”
Warsh had previously emphasized his preference for a “less-is-more” approach to the central bank’s communications and forward guidance. As such, the Fed’s official statement was significantly shorter than usual. Warsh described it as “a bit shorter and a bit simpler.”
He also noted that it removed “forward guidance”, also consistent with his previous rhetoric. Additionally, Warsh elected to not submit his own set of “dot plot” or economic estimates for this meeting, indicative of likely changes to come.
Warsh also announced further initiatives, through five separate task forces, addressing the central bank’s communications, its balance sheet, use of existing data sources, the impact of productivity on inflation in an era of transformation and the central bank’s inflation frameworks. Warsh also reaffirmed a commitment to ensuring “ample reserves” in the banking system.
The resolution of the Iran war will likely determine the course of rates
In our view, the next few weeks will determine the Fed’s likely direction on rates, as markets gain clarity of the impact of President Trump’s announced U.S.-Iran deal. Markets will likely treat resumption of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz as the acid test.
If the Fed significantly scales back its forward guidance, we expect a regime of higher rate volatility cannot be ruled out. Such a regime may enhance opportunities for skilled active managers to add value to portfolios.
CRN: 2026-0622-13556 R
The opinions and views of this commentary are those of Insight Investment and are not necessarily those of Advisors Asset Management. Any forecasts or opinions expressed herein are Insight Investment's own as of June 18, 2026, and subject to change without notice.
This commentary is for informational purposes only. All investments are subject to risk and past performance is no guarantee of future results. Please see the Disclosures webpage for additional risk information at commentary-disclosures. For additional commentary or financial resources, please visit www.aamlive.com.
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