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Federal Reserve (Fed) Chair Kevin Warsh said on Wednesday that current inflation pressure will not be permanent, while acknowledging that the latest inflation measures remain unsatisfactory. Warsh made the remarks while testifying at the Semiannual Monetary Policy Report before the US Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs.
Key takeaways:
Inflation will not be permanent.
Monetary policy has contributed to inflation.
The labor market remains in good shape.
It is unclear whether previous interest rate cuts were responsible for the labor market’s resilience.
Warsh is not satisfied with any of the current inflation measures.
The Federal Reserve is expected to receive taskforce briefings in early September.
The labor market appears to be broadly balanced.
There is no fixed limit to how quickly the US economy can grow.
Inflation, which forms part of the Fed’s dual mandate, remains less encouraging.
The labor market is undergoing significant structural change.”
Warsh highlights AI as long-term jobs and wage driver
Fed Chair Warsh’s testimony scores 5.4/10 on the FXS Speechtracker, notably softer relative to the historical average of 7/10, signaling a more nuanced and less forceful tone. By calling recent inflation data an “imperfect gauge of underlying inflation” and stressing that whether AI proves inflationary is “up to the Fed,” Warsh reinforces the Fed’s policy primacy, which tempers immediate hawkish implications for the US Dollar.
The emphasis on AI as a long-term job and wage creator, coupled with acknowledgment of near-term disruption and the “puzzle” of translating productivity into wages, points to a cautious, medium-term constructive view on growth rather than imminent policy tightening.
The FXS Fed Sentiment Index for Warsh's comments was unchanged, moving 0.00 points to a still-elevated level of 126.13, confirming that the broader policy backdrop remains firmly in hawkish territory despite the more moderate speech tone captured by the FXS Speechtracker. The lack of index movement suggests that Warsh’s remarks on AI, wages, and inflation data did not materially shift market perceptions of the Fed’s stance, leaving the US Dollar supported by the prevailing hawkish baseline.










