Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh testifies before Congress Today, July 14, and tomorrow. Bond traders increasingly bet the week will confirm what markets already suspect. A rate hike is coming in July.
The testimony lands alongside fresh inflation data and a wave of bank earnings. That makes this one of the most consequential weeks for anyone with a mortgage, a savings account, or a credit card balance.
Why Rate-Hike Odds Have Jumped
Traders have pushed the market-implied chance of a quarter-point hike this month to about 50%. Just weeks ago, that number sat under 10%. Two-year Treasury yields, which track Fed policy expectations closely, have stayed above 4.25%.
Fed Governor Christopher Waller triggered the shift. Markets had viewed him as one of the central bank’s most dovish officials. Waller said policymakers should consider a hike soon if upcoming data show another “hot reading” on core prices.
June’s Consumer Price Index, also releasing Tuesday, should show headline inflation easing to around 3.8% from May’s 4.2%. Falling gas prices are driving that drop.
Core inflation, which strips out food and energy, should tick down only slightly, to around 2.8% from 2.9%. That keeps it well above the Fed’s 2% target. This stickiness is exactly why rate-sensitive chip stocks still face CPI risk.
Don’t Expect Warsh to Tip His Hand
Warsh took office in May and he has already built a reputation for avoiding forward guidance. He made that clear this month at a central-bank symposium in Portugal.
“I want us to have a good family fight. When we get into that room and shut the door, we’re going to have a good debate, but I don’t have much more for you than that.”
So the testimony itself likely won’t confirm a hike. Instead, expect lawmakers to press Warsh on Fed independence from the Trump White House.
They’ll also ask whether AI-driven demand is adding to inflation, and how tariffs and Middle East oil disruptions keep filtering into consumer prices.
The real decision arrives at the Fed’s July 29 meeting, not this week’s hearings.
What a Hike Would Mean for Regular Households
A hike would raise rates on credit cards, home equity lines, and adjustable mortgages. That’s unwelcome news for borrowers already stretched by elevated inflation. Savers benefit more directly. Banks typically raise yields on savings accounts and CDs when the Fed hikes.









