Kevin Warsh’s path to Federal Reserve leadership is clear, but his tenure will begin amid the fiercest economic and political crosswinds in a generation.
Back
Kevin Warsh’s path to Federal Reserve leadership is clear, but his tenure will begin amid the fiercest economic and political crosswinds in a generation.

Kevin Warsh is set to become the next Federal Reserve chairman in mid-May, but his confirmation may be the easiest part of the job as he inherits a central bank caught between soaring inflation and a brewing energy crisis. The Senate Banking Committee’s approval sends his nomination to the full Senate at a time when markets have abandoned hopes for rate cuts in 2026, fully pricing in a “higher-for-longer” reality driven by geopolitical turmoil.
“The Iran situation has completely reshuffled the deck. No US-Iran deal means no oil relief, no relief on inflation, and no relief from the Fed,” Sidharth Sogani Jain, founder and CEO at Blue Aster Capital, noted. “For India and emerging markets broadly, 'higher for longer' is basically a slow bleed and bad for markets.”
The policy paralysis is stark. The Fed is holding its benchmark rate steady in a 3.50%-3.75% range, a level unchanged since its last hike in late 2023. Yet, headline consumer price inflation hit a two-year high of 3.3% in March, propelled by a surge in energy costs as the closure of the Strait of Hormuz keeps Brent crude above $112 a barrel. Fed funds futures now indicate a virtual certainty of no rate change through the end of the year.
Warsh, who is perceived as more hawkish than his predecessor, will immediately face a three-front battle. He must tame inflation fueled by an energy shock, navigate President Trump’s public demands for rate cuts, and steer an economy where resilient data on durable goods clashes with fears that the oil price spike could trigger a recession. The only certainty is that the Powell-era debate over when to cut has been replaced by a Warsh-era question of if the Fed may be forced to hike again.
The primary challenge for the new Fed chair is an inflation landscape dramatically altered by geopolitics. With the Strait of Hormuz, a conduit for roughly 20% of global oil supply, remaining closed, energy prices have become the main driver of inflation. The March jump in annual CPI to 3.3% from 2.4% in February was almost entirely due to this shock. Forecasts from The Capital Spectator’s ensemble model suggest headline CPI is likely to hold above 4% for the foreseeable future, with core CPI remaining sticky above 3%.
This presents a classic dilemma for the central bank. The Fed typically prioritizes core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy, as its main policy target. However, the longer energy prices stay elevated, the greater the risk that these costs bleed into the broader economy, embedding higher inflation expectations. The institutional memory of the Fed’s 2021-2022 policy error—dismissing inflation as “transitory”—will make it difficult for Warsh to argue for patience.
The Fed’s hawkish stance, necessitated by domestic inflation, has significant consequences for global markets, particularly emerging economies. A prolonged period of high U.S. interest rates strengthens the dollar and U.S. Treasury yields, reducing the appeal of emerging market assets and potentially triggering capital outflows. For a country like India, which imports over 85% of its crude oil, the situation creates a dual threat: a higher import bill and higher external funding costs.
“For India, the first pressure point is not growth but capital flows, currency and imported inflation,” explained Paresh Bhagat, CIO at Veer Growth Fund. While he noted India’s strong forex reserves provide a buffer, valuations will need to adjust to a world of tighter global liquidity. The Reserve Bank of India will likely be forced to maintain its 5.25% repo rate to manage the threat of imported inflation, creating a drag on domestic growth.
The path forward for Warsh is narrow. A move to cut rates to appease political pressure or support growth would be difficult to justify to his fellow policymakers amid rising inflation. The only scenario where easing becomes plausible is if the energy shock tips the U.S. economy toward a significant downturn, allowing the Fed to invoke its mandate to maximize employment. As Warsh prepares to take the helm on May 15, he steps not into a celebration, but into the center of a perfect storm.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.