
Stocks are flattish this morning as earnings continue to come in. Bonds and MBS are down.
Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh participated in Day 1 of the Fed’s semiannual Humphrey-Hawkins testimony. Here are his prepared remarks.
The members of our Committee have no tolerance for persistently elevated inflation. And we share a resolute commitment to restoring price stability. This was the focus of our June meeting, at which we decided to hold the target range for the federal funds rate at 3-1/2 to 3-3/4 percent.
Naturally, our work at the Fed demands a proper reading on economic conditions. As you see in our Monetary Policy Report, economic activity is expanding at a solid pace, showing resilience in the face of recent developments. Household consumption growth is moderate. Manufacturing output has moved up steadily this year. The housing sector, however, gives a different picture and continues to lag.
Because core inflation is a good guide to future inflation, I am concerned that, if this upward trend continues, it will be hard to push inflation back toward the Committee’s 2 percent goal with monetary policy at its current setting. As I said in a May 22 speech, I am cognizant of the mistake we made in 2021 by not responding sooner to the high inflation we observed, and I am determined to avoid repeating it.2
But the desire to avoid past mistakes is often the author of new ones. I argued in remarks on July 6 that one of the most important jobs of a policymaker is to clearly assess current economic conditions and not just rely on past experience to guide judgments of where policy should be headed.3 As I will explain, there are some crucial differences now compared with 2021, and there is still a credible case for inflation to begin to fall back to our 2 percent goal with policy at its current setting. But I am concerned about the equally plausible case that data in the coming weeks will show that inflation will remain at its elevated level or even trend higher, requiring tighter monetary policy in the near term.
I am committed to returning inflation to the FOMC’s 2 percent goal but also determined to avoid overtightening policy and risking a recession. Tomorrow’s inflation data will be one of several data releases I’ll be looking at to determine the appropriate path of policy.
I would note the following language: “still a credible case” that we won’t have to hike rates and “equally plausible” case that we will have to raise rates. The body language points to rate hikes in the future unless something drastically changes.
After yesterday’s CPI print, the Fed Funds futures for the July meeting took down their bets for a rate hike. Prior to the number, we were looking at a 40%-50% chance for a rate hike in a couple of weeks. Now it is under 20%. The December futures still see a 82% chance we get a hike this year and a 40% chance we get at least 2.
Yesterday’s low CPI number was driven by falling energy prices, which are reversing a little after the cease fire deal in the Persian Gulf fell apart. Will we see a spike in oil back to $100+? My guess is that additional production coming on line will help prevent that. Energy companies have had enough time to adjust output to rising prices and are almost certainly reacting.
Small business optimism improved in June, according to the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index. The improvement was driven primarily by improved expectations for sales and the economy. Pricing pressures increased however as a net 38% reported raising prices.
“Current economic conditions present small business owners with both
encouraging developments and ongoing challenges. Lower oil prices
provide welcome relief for almost all businesses, especially those that rely
on transportation, deliveries, and other oil-related activities, while also
leaving consumers with more discretionary income. For many owners,
easing fuel prices help offset some of the other cost pressures (insurance,
supplies/inventories, payroll) that continue to stress profits.”
While inflation was mentioned as the #1 problem facing small business (taxes are #2), the comments from companies continued to point to difficulties recruiting employees.
Mortgage applications fell 2.7% last week as purchases fell 7% and refis rose 4%. “Mortgage applications declined as the 30-year fixed rate increased to 6.65% , the highest level since August 2025. Purchase applications were down over the week and dipped below last year’s pace in the week following the July 4th holiday,” said Joel Kan, CMB, MBA’s Vice President and Deputy Chief Economist. “Despite higher mortgage rates, refinance applications increased, led by FHA and VA refinance applications rising 9 and 10%, respectively.”
















