Allow us this one pun: President Trump’s pick for Federal Reserve chair can’t be wishy…Warshy. Kevin Warsh, formerly the youngest Fed Board of Governors member at 35 in 2006, is on track to become the next chair of the Federal Reserve after Jerome Powell’s term comes to an end in May. If confirmed by the Senate, Warsh will have to engage in a delicate dance as chair, navigating persistent and public calls from President Trump to lower benchmark interest rates while buttressing the Federal Reserve’s historic independence. “He’s going to try to thread the needle of respecting President Trump’s wishes and at the same time respecting institutional processes,” Dennis Lockhart, who served as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta from 2007 to 2017 and has worked with Warsh, told the New York Times. “Believe me, that’s going to be quite the tap dance. It’s going to be Fred Astaire as central bank chair.” No funny business. If his proverbial tap dancing abilities are up to snuff, Warsh’s term shouldn’t usher in any huge surprises or challenges for CFOs, experts told CFO Brew. “Typically, what [CFOs] want is: They want stability in terms of the level of rates and shapes of curves, and they want policies that are supportive of their activity,” Padhraic Garvey, regional head of research, Americas, at ING, told us. “We’re not sitting here thinking about, ‘Oh, my word, we’ve got this hawkish central banker coming in who is going to jack rates up to the sky.’ It’s actually the other direction, which should be comforting.” Keep reading.—NP |