Breaking
RUРека Осиновка в Новокузнецке вышла из берегов, оставив сотни домов без светаCN強颱巴威即將迎來第三次巔峰TRAğabeyinin İş Yerinde Ailesini Vurdu: Baba, Anne ve Oğul Hayatını KaybettiINTLRoof Collapses at New Jersey BJ's Wholesale Club Amid Heavy FloodingINIndia Braces for Widespread Rainfall as Southwest Monsoon StrengthensFRMacron en Syrie : appels à un rôle français actif et reprise des relations diplomatiquesDEArbeitsmarktkrise trifft auch Manager – Rüstungsindustrie stellt weiter einTRMichael Burry'den Trump'a Sert Tepki: 'Ülkeye Karşı Bahis Oynuyorlar'ARمسح إحصائي دولي يبرز خسائر شديدة في فرص العمل والدخل في لبنانESSeis incidencias por agresiones sexistas en el primer día de San FermínRUРека Осиновка в Новокузнецке вышла из берегов, оставив сотни домов без светаCN強颱巴威即將迎來第三次巔峰TRAğabeyinin İş Yerinde Ailesini Vurdu: Baba, Anne ve Oğul Hayatını KaybettiINTLRoof Collapses at New Jersey BJ's Wholesale Club Amid Heavy FloodingINIndia Braces for Widespread Rainfall as Southwest Monsoon StrengthensFRMacron en Syrie : appels à un rôle français actif et reprise des relations diplomatiquesDEArbeitsmarktkrise trifft auch Manager – Rüstungsindustrie stellt weiter einTRMichael Burry'den Trump'a Sert Tepki: 'Ülkeye Karşı Bahis Oynuyorlar'ARمسح إحصائي دولي يبرز خسائر شديدة في فرص العمل والدخل في لبنانESSeis incidencias por agresiones sexistas en el primer día de San Fermín
Newsgather
BackFederal Reserve Holds Interest Rates Steady Under New Leadership
Federal Reserve Holds Interest Rates Steady Under New Leadership
Developing
BBC Business6/17/2026Business3 min read

Federal Reserve Holds Interest Rates Steady Under New Leadership

Quick Look

  • The Federal Reserve maintained interest rates between 3.5% and 3.75% in Kevin Warsh's first meeting as chair.
  • Despite a split among governors, the committee unanimously decided to hold rates steady due to inflation driven by the US-Israel war in Iran and uncertainty surrounding a peace deal.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

The Federal Reserve held US interest rates steady at 3.5%-3.75% under new chair Kevin Warsh. Inflation, at 3.8%, is linked to the US-Israel war in Iran, which caused retaliation and a key shipping lane closure.

Font size

The Federal Reserve held US interest rates between 3.5% and 3.75% after Kevin Warsh's first meeting in charge of the central bank.

Fed governors were split on whether to keep rates steady or increase them in a bid to tame inflation, which has been pushed up by the US-Israel war in Iran.

But, with inflation running at an above-target 3.8%, and uncertainty surrounding Trump's deal to end the war with Iran, the Fed's rate-setting committee unanimously decided to kept rates steady.

In a statement backed by its 12 members, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) said: "Economic activity is expanding at a solid pace despite elevated uncertainty that owes, in part, to the conflict in the Middle East. Productivity growth and capital investment are strong.

The Fed's statement on Wednesday represented a marked change in the central bank's communication style, one of Warsh's key promises for his tenure.

He was a sharp critic of how the Fed has communicated its decisions in the past, arguing it should say less while getting on with the job.

Its last statement, released in April, was almost 350 words, while Wednesday's update was just 132. "The Committee will deliver price stability," it concluded.

And nine of the 18 central bankers who participated in the FOMC's rate-setting process predicted an interest rate hike this year, while just one said they expected a cut. The remaining eight predicted rates will stay the same, according to the closely watched "dot-plot" grid of central bankers' expectations released alongside the decision.

Warsh did not offer a projection of his own for the "dot-plot", which he opposes, but said he encouraged his colleagues to go ahead with it.

Samuel Tombs, chief US economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said the "big news" from Wednesday was the "dot-plot" pointing to potential interest rate hikes before the end of the year.

When asked about potential interest rate hikes, he replied: "It could happen… it's hard to believe," adding "it just keeps the country down, it is so unusual".

But he heaped praise on Warsh, whom he nominated to replace Powell. "We have a very good guy over there now, so I'm guided by what he wanted," he said.

In a press conference after the decision, Warsh said the change in Fed leadership was "a natural and timely opportunity to reaffirm its mission, to review current practices".

He said forward-looking guidance from the Fed was unhelpful to discussions about interest rate and other monetary policy decisions. And Warsh said his new, slimmed-down statement "just gives you the facts as best we can judge it".

Warsh also indicated he will move quickly to reshape the central bank and how it sets policy. He launched task forces to examine five areas of how the Fed works: how it communicates, the size of its balance sheet, its use of economic data, the link between productivity and jobs, and its framework for managing inflation.

Inflation, the rate at which prices are increasing year over year, hit 3.8% in April. Trump's decision to launch strikes on Iran, which resulted in it retaliating by shutting the key Strait of Hormuz shipping lane, has been largely blamed for the increase.

It led to a spike in energy costs, which the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) has said is a key driver of the price rises.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Interest rate hike before year-end

    Possible · Within months

Open Questions

  • Will inflation continue to rise?
  • Will the Fed hike rates later this year?
  • How will the Middle East conflict evolve?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC Business.

Related Stories

More on this topicFederal Reserve