Fed likely to leave rates unchanged at what may be Powell's last
meeting, as Warsh to advance
[April 29, 2026] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — Wednesday will likely be a momentous day for the
future of the Federal Reserve as Chair Jerome Powell could signal he
will stay with the Fed even as a Senate panel is expected to confirm his
replacement.
Powell will preside over what will probably be his last meeting as chair
and hold a news conference Wednesday afternoon, when he may say whether
he will take the unusual step of remaining on the central bank's board
of governors, even after his term as chair ends May 15.
Separately, the Senate Banking Committee is scheduled to vote on the
nomination of Kevin Warsh to succeed Powell. The nomination is expected
to be approved on a party-line vote, and will then be taken up by the
full Senate next month. President Donald Trump nominated Warsh, a former
top Fed official, in January. Last year, Warsh echoed Trump's calls for
the Fed to lower its key interest rate, leading many Democrats in
Congress to question how independently he will operate as Fed chair.
The Fed is widely expected to keep its key rate unchanged Wednesday for
a third straight meeting at 3.6%. Most policymakers believe at that
level, the rate can still cool inflation by slowing borrowing and
spending, but not so much that it will drag down hiring or raise
unemployment.
Still, a key issue for the news conference Wednesday is what Powell
says, if anything, about his future. Powell serves a separate term as a
governor that lasts until January 2028. Chairs typically leave the board
when their leadership terms end, but Powell has signaled he could
remain. He would be the first chair to do so since 1948.

If Powell, who has made protecting Fed independence a key part of his
legacy, chooses to stay, he would deprive Trump of the opportunity to
pick his replacement and fill another seat on the Fed’s seven-member
board. Three of the seven current governors are Trump appointees.
At the same time, it could worsen tensions with the Trump administration
and would create what some analysts refer to as a “two Popes” scenario,
with a chair and former chair both on the Fed’s board. In that case,
divisions among policymakers could increase, if some decided to follow
Powell's lead rather than Warsh's.
[to top of second column] |

Kevin Warsh testifies during his nomination hearing to be a member
and chairman of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors before the
Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee on Capitol Hill,
in Washington Tuesday, April 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)
 Warsh argued for rate cuts last
year, but is unlikely to be able to reduce borrowing costs anytime
soon, given that most policymakers have signaled they would prefer
to wait and evaluate the Iran war’s impact on the economy.
The leadership turmoil comes while the economy remains unusually
murky, putting the Fed in a difficult spot. Inflation has jumped to
3.3%, a two-year high, as the war has sharply raised gas prices.
That makes it harder for the central bank to reduce rates. The Fed
typically leaves rates unchanged, or even raises them, if inflation
is worsening.
At the same time, hiring has ground almost to a halt, leaving those
without jobs frustrated by the difficulty of finding new ones.
Typically, the Fed cuts rates when the job market is weak, to spur
more spending and job gains.
But layoffs also remain low, as employers appear to be following a “
low-hire, low-fire ” strategy. Many Fed officials have suggested
that as long as the unemployment rate is low, the central bank
doesn't need to cut rates to spur more spending and hiring.
Unemployment declined to 4.3% in March, from 4.4%.
A key change economists will look for Wednesday is whether the Fed
alters the statement it issues after each meeting to signal that it
is possible that their next move could be either a rate cut or a
hike. Right now, the statement indicates that any change to its rate
would be a cut. According to minutes of its last meeting in March,
many of the 19 participants on the Fed’s rate-setting committee
support considering a hike, though it's likely short of a majority.
All contents © copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights reserved |