What did the markets do from the start to the end of the Fed Warsh Press conference
Market Reaction: Start of Press Conference vs. End of Press Conference
The overall takeaway is that the market interpreted Warsh and the Fed as more hawkish than expected, with the strongest reaction seen in the U.S. dollar and front-end Treasury yields. Stocks weakened modestly, while precious metals came under additional pressure.
📉 Stocks
Takeaway
- The Dow deteriorated the most during the press conference.
- The Russell 2000 gave back most of its gains.
- The Nasdaq actually recovered slightly, suggesting technology shares held up relatively well despite rising yields.
- Overall equity reaction was negative but not disorderly.
💵 Foreign Exchange
Takeaway
The FX market delivered the clearest verdict:
✅ Broad-based U.S. dollar buying
The largest dollar gains came against:
- GBP
- EUR
- NZD
- CHF
The market appears to have pushed back expectations for future Fed easing.
📈 Treasury Yields
Takeaway
- The move was concentrated in the front end of the curve.
- The 2-year yield rose over 4 basis points, the strongest move on the board.
- The yield curve flattened as long-end yields barely moved.
That is classic pricing for:
“The Fed may stay restrictive longer."
🏆 Commodities & Crypto
Takeaway
- Gold and silver extended losses as yields and the dollar moved higher.
- Bitcoin softened as well.
- Oil was largely unaffected by the Fed headlines.
Bottom Line
Biggest Winners
- U.S. Dollar
- Short-term Treasury yields
- Fed credibility on maintaining a restrictive stance
Biggest Losers
- Gold
- Silver
- Dollar-sensitive currencies (EUR, GBP, AUD, NZD)
- Small-cap stocks
Market Interpretation
Warsh’s comments reinforced the message from the dot plot that policymakers are not eager to cut rates anytime soon. The market responded by:
- Buying dollars
- Selling precious metals
- Pushing short-term yields higher
- Leaning modestly against equities
The strongest signal came from the combination of a stronger dollar and higher 2-year yields, which is typically the clearest indication that traders came away viewing the Fed as more hawkish than they did at the start of the press conference.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.