Warsh’s Fed Holds Rates at 3.5%-3.75% as Energy Prices Push CPI to 4.2%
June 17, 2026 — The Federal Reserve voted unanimously Wednesday to hold interest rates steady at 3.5%-3.75%, with Chair Kevin Warsh delivering a blunt message that inflation remains the central bank’s top priority despite cooling core price pressures.
Immediate Details & Direct Quotes
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The Federal Open Market Committee’s 12-0 vote on June 17 marked a historic moment for the Warsh-led Fed, but the decision itself brought no policy easing. “The Committee will deliver price stability,” the official statement read, emphasizing the Fed’s commitment to its 2% inflation target.
The latest Consumer Price Index data explains why policymakers chose caution. CPI rose 0.5% in May after a 0.6% increase in April, pushing annual inflation to 4.2% — the highest year-over-year reading since April 2023. Energy prices led the surge, climbing 3.9% in May and accounting for more than 60% of the monthly headline increase. Gasoline prices jumped approximately 7% month over month and more than 40% year over year in recent readings.
The Fed acknowledged that elevated uncertainty stems partly from geopolitical tensions tied to Iran and the broader Middle East conflict. Despite this, the statement noted that economic activity is expanding at a solid pace, with productivity growth and capital investment remaining strong.
Market Context & Reaction
Core CPI, which excludes food and energy, offered a slightly cooler reading at 0.2% monthly and 2.9% annually — up from 2.8% in April. Shelter costs rose 0.3% monthly and 3.4% year over year, showing persistent household cost pressures.
Markets reacted negatively to the no-cut message. As of June 17, the Nasdaq Composite fell 106.88 points, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 54.33 points, and the S&P 500 declined 30.32 points. Bitcoin also sold off on Bitstamp, sliding from the $66,000 area toward the low-$65,000 range as traders digested the hotter CPI data and the Fed’s refusal to signal near-term rate cuts.
The New York Fed’s Open Market Desk was directed to conduct overnight repurchase agreement operations at 3.75% and reverse repurchase agreement operations at 3.5%, with a per-counterparty limit of $160 billion per day. The Fed also indicated it may increase System Open Market Account holdings through Treasury bill purchases to maintain ample reserves, signaling that liquidity management remains active even as policy stays restrictive.
Background & Historical Context
Earlier in 2026, headline inflation had cooled to about 2.4% year over year in February, close enough to the Fed’s target to spark rate-cut optimism. April pushed inflation to 3.8%, up from 3.3% in March, before May’s reading accelerated further to 4.2%.
Energy index prices surged 23.5% year over year in May, driven by ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. The Fed’s implementation note kept the interest rate paid on reserve balances at 3.65% and the primary credit rate at 3.75%, effective June 18.
What This Means
The Warsh Fed has delivered a clear message: rate cuts require cooler inflation data, not wishful thinking. The next CPI report, covering June, is scheduled for mid-July 2026 and will be the key data point determining whether the central bank can consider easing later this year.
For traders, the hold decision reinforces that the Fed is willing to maintain tight policy even as growth remains solid. Energy price dynamics and geopolitical risks will remain in focus, particularly as the Middle East conflict continues to pressure supply chains and household costs.
As of this report, all eyes turn to Warsh’s first press conference as Fed Chairman for further signals on the policy outlook.
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