Billionaire Dalio sends 2-word message on Fed pick Warsh
Todd Campbell
Sat, January 31, 2026 at 10:03 PM EST
6 min read
The Federal Reserve is about to get a new Federal Reserve Chairman. After a year of criticism, President Trump has nominated long-time Wall Street insider and former Fed Reserve GovernorKevin Warsh to take over the role from much-maligned Jerome Powell,
Picking Warsh raised eyebrows on Wall Street, including mine, given his hawkish rate reputation, contributing to choppy trading and a silver and gold meltdown. Still, billionaire hedge fund legend Ray Dalio offered a blunt two-word comment on the decision, calling it a "great choice," on X, formerly Twitter.
Dalio's support followed similar comments from another legendary hedge fund manager: Stanley Druckenmiller. Druckenmiller told the Financial Times that Warsh is "very open-minded," and that he's "excited about the partnership between him and [Scott] Bessent."
The vote of confidence from Dalio and Druckenmiller is significant. The duo has 100 years of combined experience navigating Wall Street through good and bad economies, and each has managed billions of dollars during the reign of Fed Chairs ranging from Paul Volcker, who broke inflation's back in the 1980s, to Alan Greenspan, who navigated the Internet boom and bust, to Powell.
The Fed may not be as hawkish as you think
The market jitters stem largely from fear that Warsh will target inflation more than unemployment, keeping rates neutral rather than cutting them more dramatically as many had hoped.
The Fed's decisions are grounded in a dual mandate:
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Low inflation.
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Low unemployment.
That's often a tough trade-off: higher rates lower inflation but increase unemployment, and vice versa.
In 2025, the contradiction was clear. After cutting interest rates at the end of 2024, Powell moved to the sidelines until September, holding rates steady for fear that more cuts would spark inflation even as inflationary tariffs kicked in.
Related: Warsh nomination stirs Fed independence fears on Wall Street
The decision raised the ire of President Trump and ultimately cost Powell his job.
The nomination of Warsh was somewhat surprising to markets, which had expected someone with a much more dovish stance on rates to win the President's nod. During his time as a Fed Governor from 2006 through 2011, Warsh criticized the Fed for relying heavily on rate cuts to support the economy, even as job losses mounted.
He's also criticized the Fed for mission creep and warned about the Fed's quantitative easing policies, which lowered lending rates by buying bonds. His past positions have raised concerns that he could raise the Fed Funds Rate and unwind the Fed's balance sheet, further pressuring rates.
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Dalio, however, doesn't seem worried about Warsh's ability to walk the economic tightrope.
"We who have been engaged with policy makers and markets for a long time know him and respect him for his capabilities and his judgement," wrote Dalio on X. "He is knowledgeable and a reasonable man who understands the risks of having a Fed policy that is too easy as well as too tight."
Druckenmiller was even more blunt, saying:
The Fed has its work cut out for it in 2026
Dalio, the founder of Bridgewater Associates, one of the largest and most successful hedge funds of all time and the manager of nearly $100 billion in assets, has been pounding the drum over risks to the economy from the U.S. mounting debt.
America's debt totaled $38.4 trillion heading into 2026, with no signs of slowing. The debt load and ongoing spending appetite increase the need for foreign banks to want to buy Treasuries, something that could become a big problem if they balk because of geopolitical tensions, trade wars, or concerns that ultimately, a default isn't as crazy as it sounds, propping up Treasury yields.
U.S. Debt over time (select years):
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2026: $38 trillion.
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2022: $31 trillion.
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2020: $27 trillion
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2015: $18 trillion
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2010: $14 trillion.Source: Treasury.gov.
The debt risk isn't the only problem facing the economy. Layoffs totaled 1.2 million in 2025, the 7th worst year since 1989, according to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, contributing to unemployment rising to 4.4% from 4% one year ago. Meanwhile, we're dealing with stick inflation, as the Consumer Price Index has climbed to 2.7% from 2.3% last April before most tariffs took effect.
The crosscurrents set the stage for a difficult balancing act for Warsh, who will need to weigh the risks of a recession amid ongoing job losses and the potential for inflation to remain above the Fed's 2% target.
Dalio, Wall Street believe Warsh is up to the task
Worry that Warsh will keep rates higher for longer isn't backed up by the futures market. The CME FedWatch tool uses futures trading to calculate the probability of changes in interest rates, and it hasn't changed significantly since news of Warsh broke.
In fact, the odds of rates falling to 3% to 3.25% in July from 3.5% to 3.75% currently ticked higher to 25.1% from 21.7% over the past week.
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Likely contributing to the market's optimism that Warsh will keep a foot on the economic accelerator by lowering rates is his long-time Wall Street experience.
Warsh, an economic expert and lawyer who attended Stanford, Harvard, and MIT, spent the 90s rising through the ranks of Morgan Stanley's mergers & acquisitions to the position of Executive Director. He served under President George W. Bush as Executive Secretary of the National Economic Council before joining the Fed as a Governor.
"I hope that my prior experience on Wall Street, particularly my nearly 7 years at Morgan Stanley, would prove beneficial to the deliberations and communications of the Federal Reserve," said Warsh at his confirmation hearing in 2006.
Since 2011, when he left the Fed, he's been a partner at Druckenmiller's Duquesne Family Office, where he works closely with the hedge fund manager and co-authors op-eds. The connection to Bessent is strong, too, given that Bessent is a Druckenmiller protege, working under him at Soros Capital Management.
Druckenmiller's support is understandable, and given all the ties, it's reasonable to conclude that Warsh will work in tandem with Bessent, who has been a strong advocate for lower interest rates during his time as President Trump's Treasury Secretary.
"Presumably, he also knows how to deal with the president and the Treasury well," said Dalio.
My takeaway: Warsh has struck a more dovish tone over his time lobbying for the Fed Chair, and while he may have hawkish tendencies, it would seem unlikely that he'd be interested in taking the job with a goal of putting a hawkish target on his back like Powell.
Overall, his nomination may reflect exactly the kind of balance that the markets need -- someone who is rooted in Fed independence, with a track record of being as willing to keep rates higher or lower as the economy dictates-- that's reassuring given concerns over the past year that whoever is nominated would ultimately dismantle Fed independence as we know it.
Related: Why silver bears just flipped bullish after record plunge
This story was originally published by TheStreet on Feb 1, 2026, where it first appeared in the Fed section. Add TheStreet as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
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