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EconomyFederal Reserve

The contrarian view for Fed rate cuts: Payrolls will weaken, inflation will plunge, and Kevin Warsh was ‘largely performative’ in his hawkishness

Jason Ma
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Jason Ma
Jason Ma
Weekend Editor
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Jason Ma
By
Jason Ma
Jason Ma
Weekend Editor
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June 27, 2026, 6:28 PM ET
Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh after a meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee on Wednesday, June 17, 2026.
Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh after a meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee on Wednesday, June 17, 2026. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images
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Wall Street overwhelmingly expects the Federal Reserve to hike rates later this year, but a few contrarians still insist the opposite will happen.

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According to CME’s FedWatch tool, investors have priced in 77% odds that the central bank will lift the benchmark rate by a quarter-point or more by the end of the year.

That’s as the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran sent oil prices soaring, while the recent ceasefire hasn’t seen an equivalent dive in costs. In addition, the AI boom has created a chip shortage that’s making consumer electronics more expensive.

Meanwhile, GDP was revised higher, the job market has also firmed up, and the tsunami of cash tech giants are raising signals monetary policy isn’t that restrictive. And for good measure, Kevin Warsh’s first press briefing as Fed chairman last week stunned Wall Street with his hawkishness, clinching the case for tightening.

On Monday, analysts at Bank of America predicted the Fed would increase rates three times this year as policymakers take more decisive action to rein in inflation after five years of seeing it above their 2% target.

On the other side of the argument, there are holdouts like Andrew Hollenhorst, chief U.S. economist at Citi Research, who has long maintained monetary policy will get looser.

“In contrast to market pricing, we continue to see data and developments as pointing toward an economy that, rather than rate hikes, is more likely to require rate cuts,” he wrote in a note on Friday, listing reasons for why Wall Street is all wrong.

On oil, for example, the market has rapidly swung from shortage to surplus, removing the key upside risk to inflation.

And even though first-quarter GDP growth came in stronger than initial estimates, Hollenhorst pointed out real consumer spending was revised down to a multi-year low. The AI boom also obscured uneven gains. Excluding investments in computers, electronics, and intellectual property, growth would’ve been just 0.5%.

He also sees the weak housing market potentially taking inflation down faster, with the core consumer price index expected to cool to an annual rate below 2.5% by August, down from 2.9% in May.

As for the labor market, Hollenhorst sees payrolls losing momentum this summer, starting with the upcoming June jobs report. Weekly jobless claims have been trending higher too.

“It will likely take the unemployment rate rising for the market to go back to pricing-in cuts, but soft payrolls and unchanged unemployment should at least push markets to price-out hikes,” he added.

Then there’s Warsh, who was a hawk when he served as a Fed governor, sounded dovish when President Donald Trump was looking for a new Fed chief, but came out swinging against inflation at his presser this month.

During his tough talk, he stressed that high inflation was a choice, presumably made by avoiding tighter policy, and vowed that the Fed would “unambiguously and unanimously” deliver price stability. 

But Robin Brooks, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, wasn’t buying any of it.

“First, I think last week’s FOMC meeting was largely performative, seeing as this was Kevin Warsh’s first appearance as Fed Chair,” he wrote in a Substack post on Thursday. “He had to sound hawkish to draw a clear line between himself and the White House.” 

Brooks added that the market’s anticipation of Fed rate hikes doesn’t make sense because oil prices have fallen back to where they were before the Iran war started.

But he thinks the June CPI report, which will be released on July 14, will start changing minds among investors and move the consensus toward his view.

“That’s when the deflationary impulse from falling oil prices should remind everyone that the Fed isn’t going to hike and that —if anything—the next move will be a cut,” Brooks predicted.

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About the Author
Jason Ma
By Jason MaWeekend Editor

Jason Ma is the weekend editor at Fortune, where he covers markets, the economy, finance, and housing.

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