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New Axis: Wosh, Drukenmiller, Bessant, and the Next Federal Reserve Chair
Note: Recently, Kevin Warsh’s probability of becoming the next Federal Reserve Chair has surged. Wellington-Altus Chief Market Strategist James Thorne interprets the implications of Warsh as the potential next Fed Chair. Gold Finance translated.
The focus of U.S. economic policy is shifting from isolated individuals to a tightly connected network: Kevin Warsh, Stanley Druckenmiller, and Scott Bessent, all now aligned with the Donald Trump camp. They are attempting to end a 15-year Keynesian demand management experiment and replace it with a supply-side system based on productive capital rather than financial engineering.
As the decision on the next Fed Chair becomes a focal point, this network suddenly becomes critically important.
For years, the strategy has been simple: fiscal stimulus combined with ultra-loose monetary policy to support demand, resulting in an economy characterized by “asset owners being wealthy and workers being poor”—markets soar, but productivity remains sluggish, and income inequality widens.
Now, Bessent offers fiscal and industrial backing. Drawing on the tradition of Hamiltonianism, his strategy emphasizes deregulation, investment-friendly tax rules, and targeted tariffs to bring production and capital expenditure back to the U.S., allowing private capital to profit from infrastructure in energy, manufacturing, and technology sectors rather than relying on policy-driven multiplicative expansion. The government sets the rules; the private sector takes the baton.
Personal connections make the race for Fed Chair particularly intriguing. Warsh and Druckenmiller work closely together, combining the perspective of a former Fed official with the experience of one of the most successful macro investors of the era. Bessent also belongs to the same global macro investment circle, so Warsh and Bessent not only share ideological affinities but also common mentors, methods, and market experience. Druckenmiller acts as the connector among them.
Against this backdrop, Warsh’s potential role as Fed Chair is crucial. He is one of the few candidates whose record already aligns with Bessent’s vision: skeptical of balance sheet interventions and authority expansion, yet pragmatic about managing a highly leveraged, dollar-centric system without resorting to shock therapy. A Fed led by Warsh could narrow its scope, normalize the balance sheet over time, and lower interest rates in support of the supply-side agenda—rather than triggering a new round of financial engineering. Trump provides political cover; Bessent controls fiscal and industrial leverage; Warsh anchors a more focused, market-oriented central bank; Druckenmiller bridges the central bank and markets.
Now, do you understand why Warsh would be an excellent Fed Chair, why he can work well with Bessent’s agenda, and why Druckenmiller’s connections make this structure so compelling?