Trump to name his pick as Fed chair today
The identity of the next person to run America’s central bank – and face firm pressure from Donald Trump to cut interest rates – could be revealed today.
President Trump told reporters last night that he would announce a successor to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Friday morning
Trump hinted that it would be “somebody that could have been there a few years ago … I think it’s going to be a very good choice. I hope so.”
A source later told Reuters that Trump had met with former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh at the White House on Thursday.
Warsh, who interviewed for the job in 2017, is a critic of the Fed, which he says needs “regime change” to regain lost credibility.
Whoever Trump picks will needs to be confirmed by a Senate majority.
Updated at 02.39 EST
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Quilter: Trump appeases markets with pick of Warsh as Fed Chair
Investors should welcome the nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next chair of the Federal Reserve, suggests Stuart Clark, portfolio manager at wealth management firm Quilter:
“Investors will be breathing somewhat of a sigh of relief as Donald Trump confirmed he was nominating Kevin Warsh to Chair of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve. This removes an unknown we had leading up to the end of current Chair Jerome Powell’s term, and is certainly a lot more moderate of a pick than it could have been.
“Warsh was in contention for the job back in 2017 and as such comes to the role with a level of authority that is respected across the market. He has historically been on the hawkish side of monetary policy, and while he will naturally look to stay on Trump’s good side, this should help temper any expectation that the Fed will begin indiscriminately lowering interest rates when he takes the job. Concerns around Fed independence and an erosion on this should now be tempered, although Warsh’s words and actions will be scrutinised by market participants intensely. This appointment is also likely to calm markets, which had of late started to get more volatile. We have already seen the dollar recoup recent losses and the tear in the gold price end on the speculation of this news, and as always markets respond well to certainty.
“What Jerome Powell does next will be interesting to watch. He has the right to remain on the board and help set the monetary policy direction of the Fed, but whether he continues to have the stomach for it remains to be seen. The looming Supreme Court decision on whether Trump can remove board members will be critical. As ever in the world of a Trump presidency, things are never quiet and thus investors will need to keep on their toes.”
Donald Trump has also given a consolation message to the other Kevin in the race to become Fed chair.
Posting on Truth Social, the president says:
Their (sic) was great speculation that highly respected Kevin Hassett was going to be named Chairman of the Fed, and a great Chairman he would have been but, quite honestly, he is doing such an outstanding job working with me and my team at the White House, that I just didn’t want to let him go.
Kevin is indescribably good so, as the expression goes, “if you can’t do better, don’t try to fix it!” Thank you Kevin for doing such a great job! President DJT.
[Hassett is the director of Trump’s National Economic Council].
Democratic US Senator Elizabeth Warren has said that President Donald Trump’s choice to nominate Kevin Warsh to head the Federal Reserve represents the president’s latest step to seize control of the institution, Reuters reports.
She’s also called on Republicans not to move forward on the nomination until Trump has stopped the criminal investigation into Jerome Powell and the Federal Reserve which began earlier this month.
Elise Stefanik, a Republican New York representative and solid supporter of Donald Trump, has backed the choice of Kevin Warsh as a ‘very smart nomination’.
This is a very smart nomination by President Trump of Kevin Warsh as Fed Chair.
Kevin is a longtime friend and he is a fellow Upstate NY native. He is exactly the right leader at this time to right the ship at the Fed and get our economy back on track for the hardworking… https://t.co/z5hL0J47Iq
— Elise Stefanik (@EliseStefanik) January 30, 2026
Trump’s decision to pick Kevin Warsh is “somewhat of an unusual move for the President, who until now seemed intent on appointing a very dovish candidate that would almost certainly call for much lower interest rates,” says Raffi Boyadjian, lead market analyst at Trading Point.
Boyadjian adds:
Warsh, who has a track record of being an inflation hawk during his five-year tenure as a governor, is probably the least obvious choice for Trump. But it’s likely that Warsh’s views have changed since he last served on the Board in 2011.
Warsh’s biggest task as Fed chair will be to maintain confidence in its independence.
Trump’s continued attacks on current chair Jerome Powell (who he picked!) have worried investors, creating fears that a future Fed might cut rates for political, not monetary policy, reasons.
That creates uncertainty over the path of inflation, leading investors to demand higher rates for buying US debt.
Other candidates on the shortlist to be Federal Reserve chair had been Kevin Hassett, the National Economic Council director; Christopher Waller, a Fed governor, and Rick Rieder, an executive at BlackRock.
If you’re just tuning in, here’s a few facts about Kevin Warsh, Trump’s pick to run the US central bank.
Investors think Warsh will be inclined to cut rates, and they expect him to rein in the Fed’s balance sheet.
The dollar has risen today since Warsh emerged as a front-runner overnight, as the markets anticipate he could be more hawkish than rival candidates
He’s a critic of the Fed’s post-financial crisis stimulus package, and quit the central bank in 2011 over this issue.
City consultancy Capital Economics have suggested Warsh would be “a relatively safe choice.”
His nomination needs to be approved by the Senate
He’s married to Jane Lauder, an heiress to the Estée Lauder fortune, whose father Ronald – a Trump donor – suggested to the president that he acquires Greenland
Updated at 07.07 EST
Kevin Warsh to be nominated as next Fed chair
Newsflash: Donald Trump has decided to nominated Kevin Warsh as the next head of America’s central bank, the Federal Reserve.
In a post on Truth Social, the US president says he has “no doubt” that Warsh will be “one of the GREAT Fed Chairmen, maybe the best”.
That’s not a surprise, given the president’s hints last night that he would choose “somebody that could have been there a few years ago” (Warsh lost out in 2017).
But as we’ve been blogging this morning, while Warsh now favours lower interest rates he’s seen as less likely to push for aggressive cuts than some other candidates.
Trump says:
I am pleased to announce that I am nominating Kevin Warsh to be the CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM. Kevin currently serves as the Shepard Family Distinguished Visiting Fellow in Economics at the Hoover Institution, and Lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. He is a Partner of Stanley Druckenmiller at Duquesne Family Office LLC. Kevin received his A.B. from Stanford University, and J.D. from Harvard Law School.
He has conducted extensive research in the field of Economics and Finance. Kevin issued an Independent Report to the Bank of England proposing reforms in the conduct of Monetary Policy in the United Kingdom. Parliament adopted the Report’s recommendations.
Kevin Warsh became the youngest Fed Governor, ever, at 35, and served as a Member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System from 2006 until 2011, as the Federal Reserve’s Representative to the Group of Twenty (G-20), and as the Board’s Emissary to the Emerging and Advanced Economies in Asia. In addition, he was Administrative Governor, managing and overseeing the Board’s operations, personnel, and financial performance.
Prior to his appointment to the Board, from 2002 until 2006, Kevin served as Special Assistant to the President for Economic Policy, and Executive Secretary of the White House National Economic Council. Previously, Kevin was a member of the Mergers & Acquisitions Department at Morgan Stanley & Co., in New York, serving as Vice President and Executive Director.
I have known Kevin for a long period of time, and have no doubt that he will go down as one of the GREAT Fed Chairmen, maybe the best. On top of everything else, he is “central casting,” and he will never let you down. Congratulations Kevin! PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP
Updated at 07.02 EST
Should Kevin Warsh, as seems likely, get the Federal Reserve chair nomination, investors may expect him to push to shrink the central bank’s balance sheet.
That’s because Warsh resigned from the Fed in 2011, after questioning the expansion of its record monetary stimulus programme, quantitative easing (QE).
But Dario Perkins of City firm TS Lombard isn’t convinced this will happen, telling clients today:
Is Warsh going to shrink the Fed’s balance sheet? I’ve heard Mr Anti QE talk about this many times, and his views are intellectually intractable. He says shrinking the balance sheet will reduce interest rates and “crowd in the private sector”. But wasn’t QE supposed to SUPRESS long-term rates?
The only way I can make sense of Warsh’s thinking is that he is implicitly calling for a big fiscal contraction. Well GLWT, because this administration has shown no inclination to cut the deficit.
The silver price is slumping alarmingly today, at the end of a month of astonishing gains.
Spot silver is curently down 13% at $101 an ounce, just a day after hitting a record high of $121.64. That still leaves it up 40% since the start of 2025.
Daniela Hathorn, senior analyst at Capital.com, says:
“Markets have seen a busy and volatile 24 hours, with price action increasingly resembling a classic correction environment rather than outright panic. Volatility has picked up across asset classes as investors head into the weekend with geopolitics firmly in focus, particularly amid growing expectations that the US could escalate its stance toward Iran. That backdrop has encouraged a degree of portfolio de-risking, reinforcing the risk-averse tone seen late in the week.
In commodities, the move has been most visible in precious metals. Gold and silver had been trading in an increasingly speculative environment, with gold up nearly 20% and silver more than 30% over the past ten days. Against that backdrop, the near-10% pullback in gold overnight, while sharp, looks consistent with a long-overdue correction after a period of uninterrupted upside. Importantly, this does not undermine the longer-term appeal of precious metals, which continue to benefit from central bank buying and their role as hedges against political and fiscal uncertainty. Rather, it reflects some concern that prices had moved too far, too fast, without a meaningful test of momentum.
Lithuania was the fastest growing member of the eurozone in the last quarter, according to this morning’s data.
Lithuania’s GDP rose by 1.7% in October-December, eurostat reports, followed by Spain and Portugal which both grew by 0.8%.
At the bottom of the growth league table was Ireland, whose GDP shrank by 0.6% in Q4 – making it the only member state that recorded a decrease compared to the previous quarter.
Estonia, whose GDP was unchanged, was the only other member not to grow in Q4.
US stock index futures have dropped, as New York investors react to speculation that Donald Trump has chosen Kevin Warsh as his pick to be the next Federal Reserve chair.
Reuters has the details:
At 04:51 am [EST], Dow E-minis were down 456 points, or 0.93%, S&P 500 E-minis were down 72.5 points, or 1.04% and Nasdaq 100 E-minis were down 339.75 points, or 1.31%.
That reflects the idea that Warsh is less likely to launch aggressive monetary easing – despite his backing for lower interest rates – which would have weakened the dollar and fuelled inflation.