There was no ambiguity in Sintra, Portugal on Wednesday. Speaking at the European Central Bank’s annual forum on central banking, Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh delivered a clear message to anyone hoping the Fed had quietly accepted a new normal: it has not. “If there were people who thought that this central bank was going to be comfortable with an inflation objective above 2%,” Warsh said, “I guess they’d be disappointed. We’re going to deliver price stability in the US.”
The comments came two weeks after Warsh’s first press conference as Fed chair, where he struck a markedly more hawkish tone than markets anticipated. Rates remain at 3.50% to 3.75%, but the Fed’s own projections now show officials expect headline inflation to reach 3.6% this year, up sharply from an earlier estimate of 2.7%. Core PCE, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, rose to 3.4% in May, its highest reading since October 2023.
Warsh Is Deliberately Withholding Forward Guidance
One of the more consequential shifts under Warsh is what he is choosing not to say. Traditional Fed communication has relied on forward guidance, the practice of telegraphing the likely direction of rates in advance. Warsh has signaled he wants to curtail that approach, and Wednesday’s appearance was consistent: asked about the July 28-29 FOMC meeting, he offered almost nothing beyond promising a “good debate” behind closed doors.
For markets conditioned to reading Fed signals, the absence of guidance is itself a message. Investors can no longer price in a clear rate path, which introduces uncertainty that has historically weighed on higher-volatility, higher-risk assets.
A Complicated Inflation Picture
The path to 2% runs through several crosscurrents. Oil prices fell after President Trump announced a tentative deal with Iran, but negotiations have stalled and both sides have resumed strikes, keeping energy price volatility alive. Meanwhile, AI-driven demand appears to be pushing core prices higher even as supply-side productivity gains remain a future promise rather than a current reality. When asked whether AI is ultimately inflationary, Warsh declined to draw a conclusion, noting only that the Fed will make that determination and act accordingly.
Warsh also pushed back on any suggestion that political pressure would influence policy. “We’ve been an independent central bank for a very long time,” he said. “We’re going to be an independent central bank at this moment.”
What This Means for Small and Microcap Investors
This matters more for small and microcap investors than for almost any other market segment. Companies under $2 billion in market cap carry a disproportionate share of floating rate debt and depend more heavily on external financing to fund growth. When the rate path tilts toward hikes rather than cuts, the cost of that capital rises quickly, and smaller balance sheets feel it first.
The Russell 2000’s record-setting first half of 2026 was built partly on expectations of rate relief that are now being recalibrated. With the July 29 decision approaching and core inflation running above 3%, investors in smaller companies should pay close attention to balance sheet composition. Companies with manageable debt loads and strong cash generation are best positioned to navigate a higher-for-longer environment. Warsh has made his priorities clear. The question now is how quickly inflation answers back.
