US stock futures and Treasuries pared losses after President Donald Trump nominated Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve chair, with traders debating how far he would cut interest rates.
The dollar also trimmed its advance after Trump made his
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The announcement ends months of speculation over who will lead the Fed, after Trump repeatedly criticized Chair Jerome Powell for not cutting interest rates. Powell's term ends in May.
"We advise against overdoing the Warsh hawkish trade across asset markets, and even see some risk of a whipsaw," wrote Evercore ISI economists led by Krishna Guha. "We see Warsh as a pragmatist, not an ideological hawk in the tradition of the independent conservative central banker."
Gold fell 5% as metals slumped. S&P 500 futures were down 0.4% after an earlier loss of 1.1%. The dollar pared gains of 0.6% to 0.3%. The yield on 10-year Treasuries rose one basis point to 4.25%. Money markets added to bets on a rate cut in June, with two reductions priced in for 2026.
Questions will now be raised around Warsh's policy direction after he recently aligned himself with Trump by arguing publicly for lower borrowing costs, going against his longstanding reputation as an inflation hawk.
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"The market wants to be sure of the central bank's independence," said Guillermo Hernandez Sampere, head of trading at asset manager MPPM. "The start of his term will be closely watched. Whether interest-rate cuts are the right tool for rising inflation remains doubtful."
Traders also paid close attention to megacap tech earnings. Apple Inc. on Thursday delivered record quarterly sales and a better-than-anticipated forecast, but
The iPhone maker's shares dropped 0.8% in premarket trading. Microsoft Corp. steadied after its 10% slump in the previous session. Meta Platforms Inc., which surged on Thursday after showing it can monetize heavy spending on AI-infrastructure, fell 1%.
"I see today's fall in Nasdaq futures as a short-term move and see this as a buying opportunity, should there be a bigger fall," said David Rainville, portfolio manager at Sycomore AM. "I don't think that having someone slightly more hawkish than expected at the Fed is a bad thing in itself for tech on the long run."
Elsewhere, Trump and Senate Democrats have reached a tentative deal to avert a disruptive US
Bitcoin fell as much as 4%, extending a rout that gathered pace on Thursday. The token is now down more than 30% from an all-time high reached in October. Over $1.5 billion in bullish positions across all tokens have been liquidated in the past 24 hours, according to CoinGlass data.
Oil retreated as risk-off sentiment swept across broader markets, though Trump's escalating threats against Iran are keeping the market on edge. Brent traded around $70 a barrel on Friday after climbing above that level in the previous session for the first time since July.