Warsh’s five task forces and the long bond repricing
Kevin Warsh’s first Federal Open Market Committee meeting as chair ended the way markets expected on the surface, with a unanimous vote to hold the federal funds rate at 3.50 to 3.75 percent. The statement was unusually short, the dots were unusually split, and the trade that is now defining the long bond is one almost no one is talking about. Almost half the policymakers on the June 17 Summary of Economic Projections said they could support a rate hike later this year, an outcome that would not have been inside the front-month probability distribution a week ago, and the policy reaction function of the Federal Reserve just repriced. The market is no longer pricing Warsh as a continuity chair who will quietly run off the Powell playbook. It is pricing him as a chair who will defend the 2 percent inflation target with conviction, and that conviction is what is now setting the long bond.
What the new task forces actually do
In his first press conference, Warsh announced the formation of five task forces that will report back to the Committee on communications, the Fed’s balance sheet, its reliance on data sources, productivity and jobs with explicit focus on artificial intelligence, and the central bank’s inflation frameworks. The committees are not academic. Communications and inflation frameworks decide how the Committee narrates its own reaction function, balance sheet decides how 7 trillion dollars of assets roll off the Fed’s books, data sources decides which indicators the staff model treats as primary, and productivity and jobs is the structural question that determines whether the Committee eventually accepts a higher neutral rate. Each of these is a way of saying the same thing: the Powell-era model is being re-litigated in real time, and the dot plot is the surface, not the substance. The trade on the long bond is a trade on which of the five task forces moves first, and the order in which the interim reports drop over the summer is the calendar the long end will trade.
Why the balance sheet task force is the most important one
The Fed’s balance sheet is the quietest piece of the June 17 story and the one that matters most for the 10-year and the 30-year. Quantitative tightening has been running at a deliberate, predictable pace for years, with monthly caps on Treasuries and agency mortgage-backed securities. A balance sheet task force is a forum to revisit those caps, the composition of the runoff, and the eventual stopping point. If the task force concludes that the balance sheet should be larger than markets currently expect, the long bond rallies because duration is being absorbed by a price-insensitive buyer. If the task force concludes that the runoff should accelerate to defend the inflation target, the long bond sells off because the Treasury has to absorb more supply. Neither outcome is priced, and the asymmetry is wide. The five task forces were announced on June 17, and the 10-year Treasury yield closed the session up, not down, because markets read the balance sheet committee as the one most likely to deliver a hawkish surprise.
Why the 30-year auction is the next data point that matters
Before any of the task forces can produce a deliverable, the Treasury has to fund the federal government, and the next 30-year bond auction is the data point that will tell the market whether the long end is digesting the new Warsh regime cleanly. The bid-to-cover ratio, the tail, the indirect bidder share, and the primary dealer takedown will all be read through the lens of a Committee that just dropped the language that had telegraphed the next move as a cut. A strong auction, with indirect bidders absorbing most of the supply, would confirm that the long bond has already found a clearing level and the trade is to fade further curve steepening. A weak auction, with primary dealers taking an outsized share, would confirm that the Warsh repricing is unfinished and the long end has more room to back up. The auction is the next test, and the task forces are the test after that, with the next 30-year reopening currently scheduled for the second half of July.
What changed in the dot plot and why it matters
The June 17 Summary of Economic Projections shifted the median 2026 fed funds estimate up to 3.875 percent, a quarter-point above the current target range, and removed the prior signal that the Committee expected one cut before year-end. The dispersion is the more important data point. Nine of eighteen dots now sit above current rates, eight sit at current, and only one sits below, which means the Committee has flipped from a cutting bias to a hiking bias in a single release. The implication for the long bond is that the term premium, which had compressed through the spring on cut expectations, has to rebuild. The market is now being forced to price a regime in which the next move is more likely to be up than down, and that regime change is what is driving the long end higher even as the front end stays pinned near the current target.
Why Warsh’s family fight framing matters for volatility
Warsh used the phrase family fight to describe the kind of internal debate he wants the Committee to have, and that framing is itself a signal for long bond volatility. A Committee that agrees out loud produces a smoother reaction function and a flatter term premium. A Committee that argues out loud produces wider distribution of outcomes, larger gaps between the median dot and the tails, and a long bond that has to be priced for a wider range of terminal rates. The Powell-era Committee, particularly in 2023 and 2024, increasingly argued out loud, and the long bond vol regime of that period is the comparison the front end of the curve is now using. The market is currently pricing a return to that regime, with the long bond implying materially more rate path uncertainty than the front end, and that gap is the trade.
The AI productivity task force and the neutral rate question
The productivity and jobs task force, with its explicit focus on artificial intelligence, is the structural piece of the announcement. If the Committee eventually concludes that AI is lifting the trend growth rate of the economy, the neutral rate of interest is higher than the 2.5 to 3 percent range that Powell’s Committee operated with, and the long bond has to be priced accordingly. If the Committee concludes that AI is a one-time productivity shock that does not change the neutral rate, the long bond trades the cyclical story instead. The interim reports from this task force will be the most-watched deliverables of the five, and the market is already starting to discount the timeline. A higher neutral rate is the most bearish outcome for the long bond that the new Committee can deliver, and it is the one the productivity task force is uniquely positioned to address.
What to watch into the July 28 to 29 meeting
The first opportunity for the new Committee to confirm or walk back the June 17 repricing is the July 28 to 29 meeting. By then, the May core personal consumption expenditures print for June 27 will be in hand, the July 4 nonfarm payrolls revision will have digested, and the task forces will have had roughly six weeks to draft interim reports. If the dots migrate further toward a hike in 2026, the long bond will price the next leg of the regime change. If the dots drift back toward a hold with optionality, the long bond will trade the task forces as a deliverable rather than a threat. The Committee that Warsh inherited was a Committee expecting cuts. The Committee he is building is a Committee that defends 2 percent and argues out loud about how. That is the new regime, and the long bond is now trading it, with the July meeting as the next checkpoint and the 30-year auction as the test that comes first.