New Fed Chair Kevin Warsh made his first FOMC appearance this week, and his hawkish tone immediately poured cold water on markets, triggering a sharp repricing across global assets. The policy rate itself did not change. The Fed kept rates unchanged at 3.5%–3.75% for the fourth consecutive meeting, with a unanimous 12-0 vote.
What scared the market was not the rate decision. It was that Warsh effectively took away the Fed’s “script.”
But the story reversed the very next day. On Thursday night, the three major indices rebounded strongly, led by tech: $NASDAQ 100(NDX)$rose 2.48%, $NASDAQ(.IXIC)$gained 1.91%, and $S&P 500(.SPX)$climbed 1.08%, almost recovering the losses from Warsh’s debut day.
In the past, markets relied on the Fed’s predictable policy path to place directional bets. Warsh cut off that path.
He removed forward guidance. This statement had only 130 words, down sharply from 341 words in April, making it the shortest statement since 2007. All rate-cut language was removed, and even the detailed voting breakdown was no longer published. Warsh said directly that “forward guidance is no longer included.”
He skipped the dot plot. Among 18 officials, 9 expected at least one rate hike before year-end, and the median rate projection for end-2026 rose from 3.4% in March to 3.8%. But Warsh himself submitted no dot, making him the only chair among 19 participants absent from the projection. He dismissed the dot plot as written “in pencil, with a big eraser.”
He questioned official data. Warsh said traditional survey data is lagging and may simply be “an echo of history.” Going forward, the Fed will pay more attention to real-time data, private-sector data, and financial market prices themselves.
He reopened the review of the Fed’s $6.7 trillion balance sheet, setting up five working groups. One of them will study whether the balance sheet should eventually shrink closer to pre-2008 levels.
How did markets react?
Rate-hike expectations reversed dramatically.
JPMorgan Asset Management’s Bob Michele said that half of the committee expecting hikes this year was a “wake-up call” for markets.
The 2-year Treasury yield jumped 15 basis points, the dollar index surged nearly 100 points, spot gold plunged more than $150, all three major U.S. indices closed down more than 1%, and the VIX rose 12.31% to break back above 18.
Sector performance was highly split. Defensive consumer staples and utilities fell sharply, mega-cap tech dropped broadly, but the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index still managed to rise 1.38% against the trend.
SpaceX is punished: Cursor deal is not a good signal anymore
SpaceX announced a $60 billion all-stock acquisition of Anysphere, the parent company of AI coding tool Cursor, which has annualized B2B revenue of around $2.6 billion.
But Cursor cannot yet generate enough cash flow to offset the dilution in the near term. Once risk appetite contracted, SpaceX sold off quickly into the close, falling 4.95% to $191.82, its first down day since listing.
The next day, the broader market rebounded strongly and tech led the rally, but $SPCX did not follow. It fell another 3.55% last night to $185.
The same acquisition was priced as “strategic expansion” in the morning and “financial dilution” in the afternoon. The only thing in between was Warsh’s press conference.
That is the new reality markets face when policy predictability is removed.
Fed Chair transitions are never cheap
Barclays data shows that since the 1930s, the S&P 500 has on average fallen 12% in the three months after a new Fed Chair takes office.
Examples include: Greenspan: -33%, Volcker: -10%, Powell: -7%, Yellen: -4%
Every cycle is different, but the pattern is consistent: a new Fed Chair usually forces markets to reprice and adapt to a new policy framework.
Warsh’s debut simply confirmed that pattern again.
Fed has moved from an era of “expectation management” into an era of “real-time data plus market feedback.”
For investors, the task is to filter out noise and focus on high-quality companies that remain underestimated.
Last night’s strong tech rebound showed that AI remains the market’s highest-conviction core asset. Pullbacks can still be opportunities, but investors need to watch oil prices carefully because they could trigger a second wave of inflation pressure.
Discussion
Has trading become harder in the second half of the year?
Was this just a false alarm, or the beginning of a more volatile regime, given that the S&P 500 historically falls 12% on average in the first three months after a new Fed Chair takes office?
Do you think rate-hike expectations will be reversed if oil prices continue to fall?
SpaceX has started to pull back — is this the bubble being punctured, or a buying opportunity?
Comments
I’m also not convinced rate hikes are guaranteed. If oil prices continue falling and inflation cools, the market could reverse some of its current hawkish expectations. Energy prices will be one of the key indicators to watch.
As for $SpaceX(SPCX)$ , I see this pullback as a healthy correction after a huge post-IPO rally rather than a broken story. I remain bullish on AI and innovation long term, but I would stay selective and manage risk carefully in this more volatile environment. Volatility often creates the best opportunities for patient investors. For now, I am more focused on long-term execution than short-term price swings, especially in AI-related leaders.
@TigerStars @Tiger_comments @TigerClub
Warsh is laser focused to crush inflation as he reminded the world that inflation has run above the 2% target for 5 straight years.
There maybe an interest rate hike later this year as Warsh seems intent on the higher for longer baseline.
What should investors do?
Buckle up as there will be volatility ahead. With short term Treasury yields spiking & VIX climbing, the market has to adjust to the reality of an unpredictable hawkish Fed.
Nonetheless the good news is that the market will rise over the long term. My tactical strategy is to continue to dollar cost average into $SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 ETF(SPYM)$ & ignore the short term macro noise. With an ultra low expense ratio of 0.02%, SPYM represents 500 of the best US companies in just 1 trade.
@Tiger_comments
Inflation is fairly bad, all thanks to the war waged, only to circle back to a peace deal that looks to be an even bigger loss (holy 300 billion reparations??)
Then everyone keeps flooding back into USD to capture the expected increase in interest rates that did not happen, yet there's no meltdown (and no, don't tell me that hiccup in equities is significant).
Warsh is well and truly the president's lapdog, taking the cop-out of keeping rates steady.
Second-half market difficulty is typically driven by shifting macro signals, liquidity conditions, and crowded positioning rather than seasonality alone, with volatility tending to rise when growth, inflation, and policy expectations become misaligned
If oil keeps falling, it reduces headline inflation and can soften rate-hike expectations at the margin, but policy responses depend more on core inflation, and wage trends than on commodity-driven disinflation alone
SpaceX (SPCX) pullbacks reflect valuation and liquidity adjustments in private markets rather than a public-market-style bubble dynamic, and whether it is a bubble or opportunity depends on financing conditions, growth outlook, and execution in the space and AI sector under its leadership。。。