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Powell refuses to leave Fed as Warsh pivots toward AI optimism

Sunday, May 17, 2026 · from 4 podcasts, 5 episodes
  • Jerome Powell defied tradition to stay on the Fed board, blocking Trump from appointing another governor.
  • New Chair Kevin Warsh, a longtime hawk, is now leaning on an AI-driven 'Golden Age' thesis to justify rate cuts.
  • Massive AI capex creates a recursive wealth effect masking a consumer recession, making Fed policy hostage to tech.

Jerome Powell is moving his office a few doors down the hall. His term as Chair ended, but he refuses to relinquish his seat as a Federal Reserve governor, a break from tradition last seen in 1947. Powell stated he stayed because political threats - including a spurious Justice Department probe into renovation costs - risk politicizing monetary policy. By remaining, he keeps the board full and prevents the president from appointing another ally.

“Powell’s continued presence politicizes Fed succession, mirroring Supreme Court dynamics.”

- Colby Smith, The Daily

The central bank’s independence is now a boardroom standoff. Powell’s successor, Kevin Warsh, built his career as an inflation hawk who criticized the Fed’s post-2008 balance sheet expansion from under $1 trillion to nearly $9 trillion. He argued it exacerbated inequality. To secure the nomination, Warsh softened his stance on rates, aligning with political demands for cuts. His first test comes in June, with inflation risks from war and oil prices making cuts economically dangerous.

Neil Dutta argues the Fed is abandoning its easing bias anyway. With unemployment low, inflation above target, and equities at records, the central bank has “zero incentive to ease.” He expects the ‘additional adjustments’ language - historically code for cuts - to be removed by summer. The threshold for a policy shift has risen: something in the economy must break.

“The Fed’s hawkish tilt is the only logical direction with sticky inflation and buoyant financial conditions.”

- Neil Dutta, Forward Guidance

What’s propping up those financial conditions is a specific kind of break. This is the largest capex boom in decades, surpassing the 1990s, but it’s a financial accelerator. AI spending fuels corporate earnings, which drive stock prices, which then juice consumer spending via a wealth effect. Dutta warns this loop masks underlying weakness; real disposable income growth is anemic. Households treat equity gains as income substitution.

Felix Jauvin argues the American consumer is “smoked.” On a real basis, retail spending has flipped negative. $47 billion in tax refunds acted as a temporary shock absorber against high energy prices, but that buffer is gone. 90-day credit card delinquencies have hit cycle highs. Jack contends the bottom leg of the K-shaped economy has been in a recession since late 2023, exacerbated by negative real wages from the recent inflation spike.

“The bottom half of the K-shaped economy has run out of runway.”

- Felix Jauvin, Forward Guidance

Warsh now aims to justify cuts using a ‘Golden Age’ productivity thesis driven by AI. Dutta thinks the data doesn’t support it. In the 1990s, software and chip prices deflated rapidly. Today, the price of compute, memory, and software is rising. A true productivity boom raises living standards, but current real income growth is flat or negative. Without the deflationary tailwinds, Warsh’s argument is a forecast, not a reality.

The policy collision is immediate. Producer Price Index data hit 1.7%, nearly triple the 0.5% economists projected, sending Bitcoin tumbling. David Bennett notes the inherent tension: Warsh views Bitcoin as a ‘policeman’ signaling monetary credibility, but he’s also a confirmed inflation hawk facing runaway producer costs. Bennett argues Bitcoin’s increasing correlation with legacy macro data means ‘finance bros’ are now driving the bus.

Warsh promised a regime change, but the math hasn’.n The entire structure relies on the continuation of a single investment flow: hyperscaler spending on AI. If it cools, the equity appreciation that anchors consumer confidence evaporates. The Fed is now hostage to a tech boom masking a consumer collapse.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

The Consumer Cushion Is Almost Gone | Weekly RoundupMay 15

  • Felix points to Yuri Tim Fidelity data showing earnings estimates are surging at a pace comparable to 2018.
  • Jack believes the current market is a policy-enabled bubble, different from historical examples like 2000, and argues it can last longer without a Fed policy reversal.
  • Jack notes bond issuance in 2025 has already surpassed 2024's total, with hyperscalers like Microsoft and Google comprising a major and growing share of the debt market.
  • A JP Morgan analysis suggests about $80 billion in passive high-yield fund flows could be unlocked to buy hyperscaler debt if the market is recategorized, providing a long-term bullish tailwind.
  • Jack highlights JP Morgan data showing public high-yield debt is stable with solid coverage ratios, while riskier leverage is concentrated in private markets.
  • Jack warns of short-term froth in derivatives, noting levered long semiconductor ETF AUM has gone parabolic and implied volatility is in the 90th percentile relative to realized volatility.
  • Felix observes retail sales data shows spending shifting toward gasoline due to high prices, with discretionary categories like autos and clothing weakening, indicating a pressured consumer.
  • April CPI came in at 0.6% month-over-month, hotter than expected, leading to negative real retail sales growth despite a nominal 0.5% headline increase.
  • Felix argues recent tax refunds, totaling $47 billion above last year, are acting as a shock absorber for consumers against high energy prices rather than a spending stimulus.
  • Consumer delinquency rates are rising, with credit card balances 90+ days delinquent hitting cycle highs, indicating balance sheets are being stretched.
  • Jack notes only cap-weighted tech indices are at highs, while equal-weight indices and retail stocks are 'smoked', illustrating a severe K-shaped market and economy.
  • Jack argues the bottom leg of the K-shaped economy has been in a recession since late 2023 or early 2024, exacerbated by negative real wages from the recent inflation spike.
  • Jack contends Fed liquidity measures supporting stocks have trapped policymakers, preventing rate cuts to help Main Street because inflation remains a problem.
Also from this episode: (2)

Business (2)

  • Jack calculates that even with a 2.4-4% forward inflation rate, year-over-year CPI won't return to 2% for another year due to base effects from the energy surge.
  • Jack says tariff revenues have fallen 30% from their October peak to $22 billion monthly, with the effective tariff rate dropping from 13% to 8%, signaling an unwinding of trade policy.

The Fed Is Losing Its Easing Bias While AI Props Up The Economy | Neil DuttaMay 13

  • Neil Dutta argues the Fed is pushing towards a hawkish stance because the labor market is stable, inflation remains above target, and equity markets are at highs, leaving little trade-off to focus on anything but inflation.
  • The current AI-driven capex boom is the largest in their careers, surpassing the late 1990s. Dutta warns its eventual slowdown will be a major macro issue, threatening equity appreciation and consumer spending.
  • Dutta questions the 'golden age' productivity thesis because prices for key tech inputs like chips and compute are rising, unlike the deflationary 1990s, and real income growth is weak.
  • Dutta expects the Fed to soon remove its 'additional adjustments' easing bias language from statements, given current economic conditions, though an actual rate hike is less certain.
Also from this episode: (6)

Macro (3)

  • Dutta states real consumer spending over the last two quarters is running below 2%.
  • Aggregate weekly payrolls, a measure of jobs, hours, and earnings, has been negative over the last three months, indicating household balance sheets are under pressure.
  • Manufacturing production is only up about 0.5% over the past year, leading Dutta to be skeptical of a significant industrial renaissance despite positive PMI readings.

Labor (2)

  • Wage growth remains sluggish at around 3.5%, as measured by average hourly earnings and the Employment Cost Index, which Dutta sees as evidence labor market conditions are not tight.
  • Non-residential construction, including data centers and heavy engineering, is a major driver of recent employment growth, offsetting earlier reliance solely on healthcare.

Energy (1)

  • Geopolitical energy shocks, U.S. energy exports, and tariffs are seen as key drivers of current inflation, creating a tension between the Fed's mandate and White House policy.

Fired alarm: AI hype versus labour-market historyMay 14

Also from this episode: (10)

AI & Tech (5)

  • Callum Williams says polling shows the average American believes they have a 20% chance of losing their job in the next five years, a sentiment echoed by AI leaders.
  • Williams argues that rapid, economy-wide job destruction from new technology is historically unprecedented, as even the Industrial Revolution saw British employment nearly triple in the century after 1760.
  • Williams notes mid-20th century job disruption from computers and new manufacturing was much higher than today or during the Industrial Revolution, yet that period is now seen as a golden age for workers.
  • Williams proposes a historical benchmark: if US per-person GDP growth exceeds 2-2.5% annually alongside high corporate profits and broad job losses, it would signal an unprecedented AI disruption, which current data does not show.
  • Williams suggests Silicon Valley's doomsaying stems from historical ignorance and a poor model of how average people use technology, more than just branding for IPOs.

History (1)

  • Recent scholarship challenges the 'Engels' Pause' narrative of wage stagnation from 1790-1840, noting slow productivity growth and rapid population growth meant steady wages were a positive outcome.

Business (1)

  • For the first time, the unemployment rate for new graduates exceeds the overall rate, but Williams attributes this weakening labor position to factors predating ChatGPT, not AI.

Trade (2)

  • John McDermott reports the Kabanga nickel deposit in Tanzania, known for 50 years, is now pivotal as the West seeks alternatives to China's dominance of the nickel supply chain from Indonesia.
  • New Western competition is making China more amenable to African requests for on-site mineral processing, a shift from the old model of just shipping raw ore.

Diplomacy (1)

  • McDermott says the US is using diplomatic pressure, making support for Tanzania conditional on progress at Kabanga, as part of a broader, muscular effort to insert American firms into African mining from the DRC to Zambia.

A New Leader — and a New Showdown — at the FedMay 14

  • Jerome Powell broke Fed tradition by staying as a governor after his chair term ended; the last precedent was in 1947 under President Truman's request.
  • An investigation by U.S. Attorney Janine Piro into Fed HQ renovations was spurious but created a political blockade; Senator Tom Tillis refused to advance Fed nominations until it closed.
  • Powell stated he stayed because threats risked politicizing the Fed's monetary policy; his leverage was blocking Trump from appointing another governor.
  • Kevin Warsh served as Fed governor during the 2008 crisis and left in 2011 over disagreements on interventionism.
  • Warsh criticizes the Fed's expanded balance sheet from under $1T pre-2008 to nearly $9T post-pandemic; he argues it exacerbates inequality and threatens independence.
  • Colby Smith notes high inflation post-pandemic stemmed from Biden's stimulus, supply chain constraints, and Fed overstimulus.
  • Warsh, historically an inflation hawk, shifted tone toward supporting rate cuts during his nomination, raising concerns about political motivation.
  • Warsh's first June meeting as chair faces a credibility crisis: cutting rates appears political, while holding them maintains Powell's stance.
  • Powell's continued presence as a governor politicizes Fed succession, mirroring Supreme Court dynamics and altering future policymakers' exit calculus.
Also from this episode: (1)

War (1)

  • Current inflation risks from war and high oil prices make rate cuts economically disastrous, putting Warsh in conflict with Trump's demands.

CLARITY Under Attack | Bitcoin NewsMay 13

  • The Senate confirmed Bitcoin-friendly Kevin Warsh to the Federal Reserve Board in a 51-45 vote, with Senator John Fetterman joining Republicans, clearing his path to potentially replace Chair Jerome Powell.
  • Kevin Warsh has described Bitcoin as an important asset and a monetary policy signal, holds an equity stake in Lightning payment startup FlashNet, and maintains advisory ties to Bitwise and stablecoin project Basis.
  • Square has automatically enabled Bitcoin payments via Lightning for roughly 1 million eligible U.S. merchants, with merchants receiving dollar settlements by default to remove currency risk.
  • Charles Schwab launched spot Bitcoin trading for retail clients with a 75 basis point fee, integrating it directly into brokerage accounts that hold over $11 trillion in client assets.
  • Franklin Templeton and Kraken parent Payward partnered to tokenize traditional financial products like money market funds, aiming to make them usable as on-chain collateral or cash management tools.
  • The Producer Price Index (PPI) printed at 1.7%, nearly three times higher than the 0.5% economists expected, signaling coming consumer inflation and pressuring Bitcoin's price lower.
  • David Bennett argues Bitcoin price action now correlates more strongly with traditional economic news like CPI and PPI due to increased ownership by mainstream finance, a shift from its first decade.
  • Kyle Olney argues the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act (BRCA), Section 604, is the existential provision of crypto market structure legislation, as it protects non-custodial software developers from being prosecuted as money transmitters.
  • Olney warns that without BRCA protections, developers like those behind Tornado Cash and Samourai Wallet face criminal prosecution for publishing code, which would drive innovation offshore to jurisdictions like Singapore or the UAE.
  • CFTC Chairman Mike Selig filed amicus briefs backing prediction market Kalshi against Ohio and other states, asserting the CFTC's exclusive jurisdiction over event contracts traded on designated contract markets.
  • The CFTC has sued five states - Wisconsin, New York, Arizona, Connecticut, and Illinois - for interfering with CFTC-regulated prediction markets like Kalshi, Polymarket, and Coinbase.
Also from this episode: (2)

AI & Tech (1)

  • Anthropic and OpenAI explicitly warned that tokenized versions of their company stock sold without board approval are void and carry no economic value or shareholder rights.

Corruption (1)

  • The Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) is lobbying against BRCA Section 604, arguing it would enable money laundering, aligning with banking lobby opposition to other parts of the Clarity Act.