The Federal Reserve's first meeting under Chairman Kevin Warsh revived the prospect of higher borrowing costs, sending the dollar to its strongest level in more than a year and triggering a broad selloff in equities.
The Federal Reserve's first meeting under Chairman Kevin Warsh revived the prospect of higher borrowing costs, sending the dollar to its strongest level in more than a year and triggering a broad selloff in equities.

The Fed held its benchmark rate at 3.5% to 3.75% on Wednesday but its updated dot plot showed the median official now expects rates to end 2026 at 3.8%, up from 3.4% in March — implying at least one quarter-point increase before year-end.
"The Fed held rates steady but spoiled the mood with a much more hawkish dot plot," said Sonu Varghese, chief macro strategist at Carson Group. "Elevated inflation makes that understandable, but the committee is far from united, with only about half still penciling in rate hikes later this year."
The dollar index headed for its highest close in more than a year, extending gains that pushed the greenback to 94.66 against the Indian rupee and weighed on commodity prices from coffee to sugar. The two-year Treasury yield jumped to 4.22%, while the S&P 500 fell 1.21%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 507 points, or 0.98%, and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.34%. In Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 bucked the trend, rising above 71,000 for the first time.
The shift in rate expectations tightens global financial conditions at a time when emerging-market currencies are already under pressure and commodity-dependent economies face a stronger dollar headwind. The Fed's next meeting in September will show whether the hawkish pivot hardens into action or softens as new data arrives.
Complicating the forward guidance was Warsh's decision to abstain from submitting his own rate forecast — a break from tradition that injected additional uncertainty into the policy outlook. In his inaugural press conference, Warsh announced the creation of five dedicated task forces examining communications, balance-sheet management, data usage, productivity and employment, and the central bank's approach to inflation targeting, a broad operational review that marks a departure from his predecessors' approach.
"The market doesn't like regime change," said David Zervos, chief market strategist at Jefferies, on CNBC.
The last time a new Fed chair presided over a meeting that produced this magnitude of equity decline was in 1994, when the S&P 500 fell more sharply on the first policy day under a new leader, according to Bespoke Investment Group data. That comparison highlights the market's sensitivity to shifts in the Fed's institutional posture.
Rate Differentials Drive Dollar Higher
The dollar's rally reflects a widening interest-rate advantage over major peers. With the Fed now pointing toward a potential hike while the European Central Bank and Bank of Japan maintain accommodative stances, the rate differential has expanded in the greenback's favor. The DXY index's move above levels not seen since early 2025 has already triggered margin calls in some emerging-market currency positions, traders said.
For commodity markets, the stronger dollar adds a second layer of pressure. Sugar and coffee futures declined this week as the greenback's ascent made dollar-denominated raw materials more expensive for non-U.S. buyers. The Indian rupee fell 21 paise to 94.66 against the dollar, reflecting the broader EM currency strain.
What Comes Next
Overnight-indexed swap markets will now recalibrate to the new dot plot median. If the September meeting confirms the hawkish trajectory, the dollar could extend its gains, further compressing risk assets. Conversely, softer inflation prints in the months ahead could give the Fed cover to hold the line, potentially reversing the dollar's recent strength. The CME FedWatch tool will be the key barometer for shifts in rate expectations between now and the September 15-16 meeting.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.