Market participants warn Wosh’s first press conference could drive re-pricing:
both hawkish and dovish messaging pose meaningful risks to rates, inflation
expectations and Fed communication. UBS says Wosh’s policy stance and reaction
function remain unclear; either hawkish or dovish remarks could spook markets.
ANZ sees strong reform intent and expects the press conference to outline
proposals, with fuller detail likely in Wosh’s Jackson Hole keynote in August.
BofA expects a dovish tilt — Wosh may argue the Iran shock raises price levels
but not underlying inflation and should be largely ignored by the Fed amid
reports the conflict is de‑escalating. Capital Economics flags the risk Wosh
could sound more hawkish than markets expect, either from a communication slip
or because his stance is less dovish now than during his nomination push. Yale
cautions that overreliance on soft arguments like AI-driven disinflation at the
expense of hard data could repeat the Fed’s ‘transitory’ inflation error. Nordea
expects a neutral-to-slightly hawkish tone to shore up credibility; any
communication shift would be signaling rather than immediate policy. BNY Mellon
notes Wosh’s criticism of forward guidance and says he may use (or curtail)
press events to signal a change in Fed communication. MFS judges dovish language
is possible given Wosh’s tech-productivity views but considers it unlikely
because it would undermine his hawkish credibility.