Analyst Colby Smith says Fed Chair Kevin Warsh has been tight-lipped on the
future rate path, offering almost no explicit guidance. That preserves the Fed’s
policy flexibility but increases the risk that market narratives about the
economy or policy reactions will diverge, requiring later clarification and
amplifying volatility. Barclays U.S. chief economist Marc Giannoni warns that
silence cedes initiative to the market and may leave Warsh frustrated by market
judgments. Warsh’s reticence appears not to be shared across colleagues: a dozen
regional Fed presidents and board members continue to speak publicly about the
outlook and conditional policy moves. Vincent Reinhart at BNY Mellon Investment
Management says dissenting voices will fill the vacuum and expects the most
vocal will be those favoring rate hikes, a cohort that has expanded in recent
months.