The Fed Put May Be Ending: How a Warsh-Led Regime Change Could Reshape Investing
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The Fed Put May Be Ending: How a Warsh-Led Regime Change Could Reshape Investing
The script argues that the 15-year era of heavy Federal Reserve market support—lower rates, liquidity, and quantitative easing that encouraged “buy the dip” and inflated asset pricing—may be ending under new Fed chair Kevin Warsh, who wants a smaller, quieter Fed with less intervention and fewer tailwinds for growth-at-all-cost assets, shifting markets from liquidity-driven to cash-flow-driven returns. It says this is a regime change more important than any single rate cut, critiques the Fed’s lagging inflation measures, and notes hotter inflation and war-driven energy price spikes complicate near-term easing. The author “handicaps” three likely changes: smoothing inflation data and de-emphasizing the 2% target to allow modest short-rate cuts while keeping long rates higher, potentially selling mortgage-backed securities to pressure mortgage yields, and leaning on AI productivity while debt is inflated away. For income investors, cash/T-bills may become less compelling, volatility may rise without a “Fed put,” and hard assets with pricing power and contractual cash flow may outperform; the biggest mistake is sticking with the post-2009 growth/multiple expansion playbook instead of building durable income portfolios.
00:00 Fed Put Era Ending
00:54 Warsh Regime Shift
01:47 Inflation Data Debate
02:49 Handicapping Not Forecasting
03:51 Three Fed Changes
06:14 Yield Curve Reality Check
06:42 Income Investor Playbook
08:46 Avoid Old Growth Trap
09:08 Build Durable Income
09:34 Wrap Up And Next Steps
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