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Trump Nominates New Fed Chair – The Wealth Management Verdict

Editorial Staff

2 February 2026

While his appointment to Federal Reserve chair remains subject to Senate confirmation, President Donald Trump’s nomination of Kevin Warsh to be the next Fed boss ends months of speculation about who will take over from Jerome Powell. If Warsh gets the post, he will take up the role in May.

And contrary to expectations that a new Fed chair will automatically do the bidding of Trump on interest rate cuts, Warsh has been seen as something of a monetary policy “hawk,” although Trump’s backing appears to suggest that further rate cuts could take place. The end of uncertainty appears to have pulled the rug from underneath those betting on further large rises in the gold price. In the past few days, for example, the safe-haven asset of gold has fallen from near $5,600 per ounce to below $5,000.

Warsh – a figure who has advised the president before – has already been a Fed governor.

The choice of who is the next head of the world's most powerful central bank has been a topic for analysis for months, amid concerns that Trump wants the Fed to ease monetary policy. It turns out that such a calculation is not so straightforward.

“I have known Kevin for a long period of time, and have no doubt that he will go down as one of the great Fed hcairmen, maybe the best,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform. “On top of everything else, he is ‘central casting,’ and he will never let you down.”

According to media reports (Bloomberg, others) Trump was quoted as saying that he had not asked Warsh to commit to cuts.

“Kevin Warsh brings an unusual combination of hawkish instincts, openness to innovation, and deep respect for Fed independence,” Dan Siluk, head of global short duration and liquidity and portfolio manager at with others at the Fed, there is a sense that Warsh is well respected and not a Fed Chair likely to represent a threat to the Fed’s independence,” Dowding said. 

“In this sense, some of the fears with respect to the possible undermining of institutional credibility in the US may have been exaggerated in some quarters. There is also an understanding that Warsh will be inclined to shrink the Fed’s balance sheet and narrow parts of its mandate,” Dowding added.