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Einhorn Substantially Raises Expectations for Fed Rate Cuts Under Warsh Leadership
David Einhorn, the seasoned billionaire investor who has steered Greenlight Capital for roughly three decades, recently made a bold prediction about the Federal Reserve’s direction in 2026. While mainstream market participants anticipate two rate reductions this year—bringing the federal funds rate down to a 3% to 3.25% range—Einhorn contends the consensus view is significantly off target. The prominent value investor believes incoming Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh will pursue rate cuts substantially more aggressive than the market currently prices in.
This prediction hinges on a fundamental reassessment of how Warsh will govern the nation’s central bank, and what his appointment signals about the Fed’s priorities under Trump administration influence.
Why The Market Misjudges Warsh’s Policy Direction
When President Donald Trump announced Kevin Warsh as his selection for the next Fed chair—a role Warsh will assume in May—initial market reactions were mixed. Investors had harbored concerns that any Trump-selected chair might prove overly accommodating to presidential pressure for lower rates. That anxiety drove some capital into defensive assets like precious metals.
However, the appointment of Warsh shifted the narrative. His credentials appeared reassuring: he worked closely with legendary investor Stanley Druckenmiller on Wall Street and served as one of the Federal Reserve’s youngest Board of Governors members from 2006 to 2011. Yet beneath this establishment pedigree lies a more nuanced picture than conventional wisdom suggests.
Einhorn’s recent CNBC commentary reveals why. He believes Warsh will strategically advocate for rate reductions across most economic scenarios. “If we have 4% or 5% inflation, sure, then he won’t be able to persuade people, but otherwise he’s going to argue productivity,” Einhorn explained. This productivity argument carries weight—the logic being that efficiency gains allow businesses to expand without translating into consumer price pressures.
More provocatively, Einhorn contends Warsh will champion lower rates “even if the economy is running hot.” To position his fund for this outcome, Einhorn has accumulated positions in gold and futures contracts on the secured overnight financing rate (SOFR), an index closely tied to the federal funds rate that the Fed directly controls.
The Apparent Contradiction: A Hawk Advocating For Cuts
The seeming paradox in this narrative warrants examination. Warsh’s track record during his previous Fed tenure was decidedly hawkish—he consistently prioritized inflation concerns over labor market stability. Under those same principles applied today, he would unlikely advocate for reductions given that inflation remains elevated relative to the Fed’s 2% preference, even as unemployment recently declined to 4.3%.
Yet Einhorn’s logic for why Warsh might deviate from this playbook appears sound. Trump has made no secret of his appetite for lower borrowing costs. It would strain credulity to imagine Trump selected Warsh without receiving at least preliminary assurances that the new chair would work to persuade the Federal Open Market Committee toward rate reductions.
The resolution of this apparent contradiction may rest on a broader Fed toolkit than public discussion typically emphasizes. Warsh, alongside Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, has signaled interest in shrinking the Federal Reserve’s outsized balance sheet. During Jerome Powell’s tenure, the balance sheet expanded dramatically in pandemic response. While the Fed has employed quantitative tightening (QT) to pare it back, those efforts concluded last year.
The Balance Sheet Strategy: Cutting Rates While Tightening Assets
Here’s where Warsh’s hawkish credentials and Trump’s rate-cut desires might coexist: the Fed chair could theoretically lower interest rates while simultaneously deploying quantitative tightening. This dual approach would satisfy both constituencies—delivering the rate cuts that Trump and markets desire while maintaining the policy discipline hawks prefer.
However, this balancing act carries material risks. Quantitative tightening can prove difficult to calibrate precisely. When executed too aggressively, it drains reserves from financial markets excessively quickly, potentially destabilizing short-term funding rates. History provides cautionary lessons: in 2019, Fed tightening created such strains that the central bank ultimately reversed course and injected capital to restore stability. The Fed’s subsequent pause on QT reflected awareness of these risks.
The broader point investors should absorb extends beyond interest rates alone. How the Federal Reserve manages its balance sheet—the composition, pace, and magnitude of asset adjustments—could prove equally consequential for market performance as the benchmark rate itself. Astute market participants would be wise to monitor both dimensions of Fed policy with equal vigilance.
Einhorn’s conviction that the Fed will cut substantially more aggressively than consensus expects rests on this recognition. Whether his forecast proves prescient will depend heavily on Warsh’s willingness to prioritize growth-oriented monetary policy despite hawkish instincts, and how skillfully he navigates the technical complexities of balance sheet management.