The New Fed Chair's Plan To Reset The Entire Money System (Nobody Is Ready)

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The FED Reset

For the first time in decades, the Federal Reserve could be headed for a major “regime change” under Kevin Warsh. His plan could reshape how the Fed manages its balance sheet, communicates with markets, measures inflation, and protects its independence.

The Four-Part Reset

Kevin Warsh’s plan starts with aggressively shrinking the Fed’s $6.7 trillion balance sheet, which includes bonds and mortgage-backed securities bought during COVID and the Great Financial Crisis. He argues that reducing the Fed’s footprint could lower inflation risk and help the real economy, but critics worry it could push interest rates higher and hurt stocks.

Less Guidance From The Fed

Warsh also wants to reduce how much the Fed signals its next move. That could mean getting rid of the dot plot, which investors use to estimate future interest rates, and cutting the number of Fed meetings from eight per year to four. Supporters argue this would make the Fed less predictable in a good way, while critics say it could create more market volatility because investors would have less warning before major policy changes.

A New Way To Measure Inflation

Another major change would be how inflation is measured. Powell’s Fed focused heavily on core PCE, which excludes food and energy, while Warsh appears more interested in trimmed averages that remove the most extreme price changes. On paper, that could create a cleaner inflation reading, but in practice, it could make inflation look lower than it feels for everyday Americans, especially when oil, food, and supply shocks are driving real costs higher.

The Independence Question

Warsh has also said Fed independence must be “earned,” which makes some investors nervous. Powell treated Fed independence as sacred, while Warsh’s language raises questions about whether the Fed could become more politically influenced. Since Trump appointed Warsh partly because he expected lower rates, markets are now trying to figure out whether this new Fed will prioritize fighting inflation or cutting rates.

Why Rates Might Rise Instead Of Fall

A lot of people assume Trump wants lower rates, Warsh is now Fed Chair, and cheap money is coming back. But the Fed only directly controls short-term rates. Long-term borrowing costs, including mortgages, are set by the bond market. If investors believe inflation, deficits, and political pressure are getting worse, they can demand higher yields no matter what the Fed says. That means Warsh could actually be forced to raise rates first to restore credibility.

The Biggest Losers

If rates stay high or move higher, the biggest losers are people with debt, growth stocks, housing, and the government. Credit cards, auto loans, personal loans, and mortgages stay expensive. Growth stocks suffer because future profits are worth less when rates rise. Housing remains frozen as mortgage rates move back toward 7%. The government also loses because higher Treasury yields mean even more interest expense on the national debt.

The Biggest Winners

The biggest winners are savers, banks, and potentially the dollar. People with money in high-yield savings accounts, CDs, money market funds, and short-term Treasuries can earn attractive returns without taking much market risk. Banks may benefit from wider lending margins, and a stronger dollar could attract global investors while helping Americans traveling abroad.

What This Means For Investors

The biggest mistake would be assuming cheap money is coming back quickly. Warsh inherited high inflation, rising oil prices, a divided Fed, and a bond market that is already skeptical. The safer approach is to stay diversified, avoid over-leveraging, keep some cash on the sidelines, and continue investing steadily without depending on rate cuts over the next 12 months.

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