Kevin Warsh Is In. Jerome Powell Is Out. Here’s What a New Fed Chair Means for Trump’s Bull Market.
President Donald Trump’s nominee to replace Jerome Powell will have his work cut out for him. After a lengthy process, Kevin Warsh was finally confirmed on Wednesday as the new head of the Federal Reserve.
Even as a historic bull market pushes the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite to record highs, Warsh is tasked with helping the American economy navigate some turbulent waters: a President calling publicly for lower rates while oil prices spike and inflation jumps.
|
Will AI create the world’s first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on a little-known company, called an “Indispensable Monopoly,” providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. |
The Powell tenure saw record inflation fueled by COVID-19 and an oil crisis largely tamed. But in the last couple of months of his term, a second oil crisis and a war in Iran reignited inflation.
In April, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) saw its biggest jump since 2023 — 3.8%. And the wholesale index, which tends to reveal trends before they show up in the CPI, jumped a whopping 6% last month. This is the situation Warsh inherits.
Will Warsh cut rates with inflation nearing 4%?
Warsh spent years arguing that the Fed has room to cut rates, and the president who picked him has been even more vocal about wanting them lower, but what happens when inflation is nearing 4%?
Warsh isn’t new to the Fed. He served as a governor from 2006 to 2011 and was one of the youngest people ever appointed to the role. His reputation through the back half of the Powell years was as a dove — someone who believes rates can be cut — with a market-friendly approach. He believes the Fed takes too active a role and should take a more hands-off approach.
However, even if these are his general views, things have changed quite a bit recently. The question now becomes whether or not the Warsh Fed will “see through” the current spike in inflation, believing it’s mostly transitory, or if it will step in and raise rates.
What higher rates could mean for the AI bull market
If the Fed does have to act — especially if it does so aggressively — the current bull run could be in real trouble. Beyond record valuations not seen since the dot-com era, the industry driving stocks higher — AI — is heavily reliant on cheap debt, and higher rates mean that debt becomes not so cheap.
While hundreds of billions are being pumped into AI infrastructure from hyperscalers like Amazon and Microsoft, much of the AI data center build-out is reliant on financing. If rates jump and borrowing costs rise, the math will look a lot different for these AI companies. And in that scenario, the optimism that’s been fueling the AI trade fades — and fast. It wouldn’t be the first time.





