Currencies June 9, 2026 08:06 AM

Deutsche Bank Flags June Fed Meeting as Crucible for New Chair Warsh

DB's FX chief warns markets will probe Warsh's stance on rates, with potential implications for dollar and euro trading

By Avery Klein
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Deutsche Bank's head of foreign exchange research, George Saravelos, says the June Federal Reserve meeting - the first led by incoming chair Kevin Warsh - will be a pivotal moment for rate policy and could spark notable market volatility. Saravelos highlighted the ongoing debate over whether U.S. interest rates are sufficiently restrictive amid solid growth, rising inflation and easing fiscal policy, and noted that current central bank pricing leans dollar-bullish versus the euro.

Deutsche Bank Flags June Fed Meeting as Crucible for New Chair Warsh
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Key Points

  • June Fed meeting will be the first chaired by Kevin Warsh and is expected to test his credibility on rate policy.
  • George Saravelos of Deutsche Bank says current central bank pricing and risks lean toward a dollar-bullish backdrop versus the euro.
  • Markets are debating whether U.S. rates are restrictive enough as growth stays solid, inflation picks up and fiscal policy eases; money markets price at least one quarter-point hike by October.

Deutsche Bank's lead FX strategist, George Saravelos, told Bloomberg TV that the Federal Reserve's June meeting will be a key test of incoming chair Kevin Warsh and could prompt significant market moves.

"The market will test Chair Warsh, it will test his credentials and we could potentially see quite a lot of volatility," Saravelos said.

Warsh is set to preside over his first Federal Reserve meeting and press conference next week, taking over the role from Jerome Powell. The central question Saravelos identified is whether U.S. interest rates are restrictive enough - a debate he described as the "big debate at the moment" amid a backdrop of continued economic expansion, accelerating inflation and a loosening of fiscal policy.

Money markets, Saravelos noted, are already placing odds on at least one quarter-point rate increase by October. Separately, President Donald Trump has publicly argued that the Fed would be wrong to raise rates.

On currency implications, Saravelos pointed to an asymmetric outlook for the dollar relative to the euro. He said that the prospect of higher policy rates is generally more supportive for the dollar than for the euro on a relative basis.

"Hiking for inflation and for bad reasons is not as good for a currency as, of course, if you are having positive growth dynamics," he said, stressing that the motive behind rate moves matters for exchange-rate outcomes.

Reflecting current market pricing and attendant risks, Saravelos argued that conditions have tended to lean in a dollar-bullish direction. "If I look at current central bank pricing and the risks around that, I would say they do lean in a more dollar-bullish direction, which is one reason we stayed away from expressing dollar bearish views over the last few months," he said.

He also cautioned that an alternative outcome - in which Warsh adopts a more dovish posture - could flip the market reaction. In that scenario, Saravelos said, "you actually see a lot more of the repricing in the back end, which could be more negative for the dollar." He added that for the dollar to sustain a positive follow-through, investors would need to see the Fed abandon any perceived easing bias.


Market context and implications

Saravelos’ comments frame the June meeting as both a credibility test for a new Fed chair and a potential catalyst for volatility across fixed income and foreign exchange markets. The interaction between growth, inflation and policy signals will be central to how traders position for the dollar and euro, while money-market pricing of future rate moves will remain a focal point for those watching yield curves and currency pairs.

The comments underline that the direction and rationale for policy changes - whether motivated by inflation, growth or other considerations - can have differing effects on currencies and on investor sentiment more broadly.

Risks

  • If Warsh signals a dovish tilt, longer-term yields could be repriced lower, which may be negative for the dollar - impacting currency markets and fixed income investors.
  • Ongoing uncertainty about whether U.S. rates are sufficiently restrictive creates volatility risk for currency pairs (notably EUR/USD) and for interest-rate sensitive sectors such as banking and sovereign bond markets.

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