Week of June 22: Kashkari breaks hawkish while Williams holds the center
2026/6/29 · 8:11

Week of June 22: Kashkari breaks hawkish while Williams holds the center

Kashkari shifted from a 2026 cut to a 2026 hike, while Williams argued current policy is still well positioned. Waller and Cook added context without rate guidance, leaving the committee hawkish at the margin but not uniformly so.

This week delivered one explicit rate-path shift, one hold-the-line speech, and two public appearances that were not rate guidance. Neel Kashkari moved from a 2026 cut to a 2026 hike. John Williams said current policy is "well positioned." Christopher Waller and Lisa Cook spoke publicly, but their prepared remarks were about dollar infrastructure and small-business data rather than near-term rates.
Coverage note: the formal window for this issue is June 22-28, 2026. The June 17 FOMC decision is outside that window, so it is treated below as the baseline, not as a new weekly signal. The official FOMC page lists 12 voting members for 2026: Warsh, Williams, Barr, Bowman, Cook, Hammack, Jefferson, Kashkari, Logan, Paulson, Powell, and Waller.1

Signal table: June 22-28

Voting memberPublic item found this weekTone readPolicy signalAsset read
Kevin Warsh, ChairNo qualifying public remarks found in the June 22-28 Fed calendar or speech archive. Fed calendar / Fed speeches archiveNeutral by silenceNo fresh guidance after the June 17 meeting.No new Warsh-specific signal for rates, bonds, USD, equities, or risk assets.
John C. Williams, Vice Chair; New York FedPrepared remarks published June 25 by the New York Fed. New York FedNeutral to mildly dovishInflation is too high, but current policy is "well positioned" and inflation should edge down.Less supportive of a near-term hike than Kashkari; modestly constructive for duration if incoming inflation cools.
Michael S. Barr, GovernorNo qualifying public remarks found in the June 22-28 Fed calendar or speech archive. Fed calendar / Fed speeches archiveNeutral by silenceNo new monetary-policy signal.No incremental asset signal.
Michelle W. Bowman, Vice Chair for SupervisionJune 25 discussion on small bank supervision and regulation was listed on the Fed calendar, but no Fed text was posted in the speech archive. Fed calendar / Fed speeches archiveNeutral for monetary policySupervision/regulation appearance; no posted rate-path guidance.Bank-regulatory relevance, but no clear rates or USD signal.
Lisa D. Cook, GovernorJune 24 welcome remarks at the State of Small Business Symposium. Federal ReserveNeutralEmphasized the dual mandate and small-business data; did not give a near-term rate call.Growth-quality signal through small-business productivity and credit data; limited immediate rates read.
Beth M. Hammack, Cleveland FedNo qualifying June 22-28 public remarks found in official Fed sources or the targeted media search. Fed calendar / Fed speeches archiveNeutral by silenceNo new signal this week.Her earlier hawkish line remains background only, not a new weekly input.
Philip N. Jefferson, Vice ChairNo qualifying June 22-28 public remarks found in official Fed sources or the targeted media search. Fed calendar / Fed speeches archiveNeutral by silenceNo new signal this week.No incremental asset signal.
Neel Kashkari, Minneapolis FedJune 26 CNBC report on Aspen Ideas Festival remarks. CNBCHawkishShifted from penciling in one 2026 cut in March to one 2026 hike in June.Bearish front-end rates; supportive for USD; negative for rate-sensitive equities and longer-duration risk assets.
Lorie K. Logan, Dallas FedNo qualifying June 22-28 public remarks found; June 3 remarks are outside this week's window. Fed calendar / Fed speeches archiveNeutral by silenceNo new signal this week.Earlier hike-risk comments remain background, not a fresh catalyst.
Anna Paulson, Philadelphia FedNo qualifying June 22-28 public remarks found in official Fed sources or the targeted media search. Fed calendar / Fed speeches archiveNeutral by silenceStill little public monetary-policy record in 2026.No incremental asset signal.
Jerome H. Powell, GovernorNo qualifying June 22-28 public monetary-policy remarks found. Fed calendar / Fed speeches archiveNeutral by silenceNo public explanation of his post-chair vote or stance this week.No incremental asset signal.
Christopher J. Waller, GovernorJune 22 welcoming remarks at the dollar conference. Federal ReserveNeutral for rates; structurally dollar-positiveFocused on stablecoins, Treasury demand, payment rails, and the dollar's international role; no rate-path guidance.Medium-term support for dollar-infrastructure themes and Treasury demand; little immediate rates signal.

What changed this week

Kashkari created the only clean rate-path surprise

Kashkari's signal is the week's clearest hawkish input. He told CNBC that in March he had penciled in one rate cut by year-end, but in June he had changed that to one rate hike.2 He also tied the shift to more than oil: tariffs, fertilizer disruption around the Strait of Hormuz, energy prices, and "hundreds of billions of dollars a year" of data-center investment feeding price pressure in adjacent sectors.2
That matters because the June SEP already moved the median 2026 federal funds-rate projection to 3.8%, up from 3.4% in March, while the 2026 PCE inflation median rose to 3.6% from 2.7%.3 Kashkari supplied the human version of that repricing: one voter is no longer debating whether cuts are delayed; he is debating whether another hike is needed.
Asset read: this is front-end bearish. If more voters move toward Kashkari's interpretation, two-year yields should be more sensitive than tens, the dollar gets support from rate differentials, and equity duration trades have less room to lean on a second-half easing story.

Williams pushed back against the hike interpretation

Williams' June 25 text goes the other way without sounding dovish. He said inflation is "unquestionably elevated" and above the 2% goal, but he also said current policy is "well positioned" to restore price stability.4 His inflation path is specific: overall inflation at 3.5% by year-end, then moving toward 2% in 2027 and landing on target in 2028.4
The important caveat is that Williams did not deliver these remarks publicly. The New York Fed published the prepared text at the originally scheduled time because he could not participate in the event.4 For signal purposes, that makes it a public written communication, but not a live Q&A with follow-up answers.
Asset read: Williams is the counterweight to Kashkari. If the committee center is closer to Williams, the trade is not "hikes are coming" but "cuts need cooler inflation first." That is less damaging for equities than an outright hiking cycle, but it still keeps rate volatility elevated around PCE, payrolls, tariffs, and energy headlines.

Waller spoke about dollar plumbing, not the next rate move

Waller's June 22 remarks were not a monetary-policy speech. He used the dollar conference to frame stablecoins and tokenized assets as new channels for dollar intermediation, including possible links between stablecoin demand and U.S. Treasury markets.5
The rate signal is therefore neutral. The market signal is different: Waller is treating dollar-denominated private money and tokenized assets as part of the future funding architecture, not as a fringe topic. That is structurally supportive for dollar infrastructure and Treasury collateral demand, but it does not answer whether the next 25 basis points is up, down, or nowhere.

Cook added growth texture, not rate guidance

Cook's June 24 remarks were a small-business data speech. She said 99.9% of U.S. businesses have fewer than 500 employees and that such firms have accounted for 61% of net new job creation since 1995.6 She also cited a survey finding that nearly half of small employer firms reported using AI in some capacity, with 71% of those firms reporting increased productivity.6
This is useful for the committee's supply-side debate. If AI-related productivity gains broaden into smaller firms, the Fed can tolerate stronger real activity with less inflation pressure. Cook did not make that leap into a rate forecast. Treat it as macro texture, not policy guidance.

Baseline from the June meeting

The June 17 FOMC statement kept the target range at 3.5-3.75% by a 12-0 vote.7 It also said inflation remains elevated and that supply shocks, including energy, have driven price increases in certain sectors.7
The SEP explains why post-meeting remarks are splitting into two lanes. Participants marked 2026 inflation higher, but they also kept the 2027 and 2028 inflation medians on a path toward 2%.3 Kashkari is reacting to the near-term inflation shock. Williams is leaning on the medium-term glide path.

Committee-level read

This week's public record is hawkish at the margin, but not uniformly hawkish.
Kashkari is the only voting member this week who clearly changed his rate path. Williams, who matters as New York Fed president and FOMC vice chair, argued that the current stance is already positioned to bring inflation down. Waller and Cook did not give usable rate guidance. The remaining eight voters were publicly quiet on monetary policy in the June 22-28 window.
For markets, the immediate read is a wider distribution of 2026 outcomes rather than a simple repricing to hikes. Rates should remain data-sensitive. The cleanest upside risk to yields is another voter adopting Kashkari's hike language. The cleanest downside risk is energy relief plus softer inflation data that lets Williams' "well positioned" line become the committee center.

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