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Market News: Fed Speech Surge Next Week — Warsh Testimony, Waller on Monday, and Five Officials Reacting to June CPI on the Same Week

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2026-07-11 11:11:02
After several weeks of relatively quiet Fed communication, next week delivers a concentrated surge of speeches before the pre-meeting quiet period locks officials out of public comment, according to Deutsche Bank's July 11 note. The timing is deliberately consequential — Warsh testifies Tuesday and Wednesday, Waller speaks Monday at the New York Business Economics Association, and four additional officials speak Friday immediately following June CPI's release. The market is watching for one specific signal above all others: whether any Fed official publicly signals support for a rate hike at the July meeting, following June meeting minutes that showed "several" members believed there was reason to raise rates last month.
The Five Events That Define the Week
Monday's Waller speech at the New York Business Economics Association is the first and potentially most market-moving event. Unlike Warsh — who is expected to reiterate recent statements and remain silent on future policy actions — Waller typically prefers to elaborate on his policy response mechanisms and expectations in substantive detail. Deutsche Bank specifically flags Waller's remarks as closely watched for signals of his policy inclinations — whether he leans toward supporting a July hike, remaining on hold, or waiting for more data. Waller's communication style means Monday's speech could provide the clearest signal of where the committee's more hawkish wing is currently positioned before Tuesday's Warsh testimony dominates the headlines.

Warsh's two-day testimony before Congress on Tuesday and Wednesday arrives as the Fed Chair's most significant public appearance since his June 17 FOMC meeting delivered the hawkish dot plot that drove six consecutive weeks of Bitcoin ETF outflows and the Reuters poll consensus of no rate cuts through end of 2027. Warsh is expected to reiterate recent statements — the "inflation risks have eased" Sintra signal — and remain silent on future policy actions, following the standard Congressional testimony format that prioritizes institutional credibility over forward guidance. However, Congressional questioning could force elaboration on the Iran oil shock's inflationary implications and the June minutes' "several members" rate hike language in ways that prepared remarks would not.
Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday bring the post-CPI reaction speeches: Cook on Wednesday, and Vice Chairman Jefferson, Dallas Fed's Logan, and Kansas City Fed's Schmid on Friday. These are the speeches the market will be most focused on for actual policy signal content — each official will have seen the June CPI data and will be interpreting it through their individual policy frameworks in real time, providing the first window into whether the data is shifting any votes.
The July Hike Possibility — Not Zero
The June meeting minutes indicated that "several" officials believed there was reason to raise rates at the June meeting. The Fed held — but the dissent was noted. Since June, the situation has been genuinely mixed in both directions. Oil prices and inflation expectations retreated following the Iran ceasefire — constructive for the hold case — but have subsequently rebounded after the ceasefire's collapse, with Brent jumping 5% on July 8 and Iran formally ruling out negotiations until the US withdraws its position on July 11. The unemployment rate fell further to 4.2% in June — a development that removes one of the traditional arguments for rate cuts. And consumer inflation expectations rose to 3.7% per the NY Fed survey, the highest since September 2023.
Deutsche Bank explicitly states the possibility of dissenting votes in favor of a rate hike at the July meeting cannot be ruled out. A dissent at the July meeting — even a losing dissent — would be the most hawkish single Fed event since Warsh's June dot plot and would likely trigger the crowded long flush that Marex described as the risk when characterizing the FOMC minutes as "the pin." Waller's Monday speech and Friday's post-CPI reaction speeches from Logan and Schmid are the most likely venues for dissent-signaling language to emerge before the quiet period begins.
The Bitcoin Read-Through — From One Catalyst to a Week of Them
July 14's CPI print had been identified as the singular binary event for Bitcoin's recovery thesis. Next week transforms that single catalyst into a week-long series of overlapping events where each Fed speech potentially modifies the market's interpretation of the CPI data in real time. A soft CPI followed by dovish post-data speeches from Cook, Jefferson, Logan, and Schmid would represent the most constructive possible macro sequence for Bitcoin's $64,400 resistance retest becoming a breakout toward $67,250. A soft CPI followed by hawkish speeches — particularly any official explicitly flagging July hike support — would produce the contradictory signal that the mixed data environment since June has made increasingly plausible.
Waller's Monday speech arrives before the CPI data and sets the prior — it will be read as either increasing or decreasing the probability that Friday's post-CPI speeches lean hawkish. Bitcoin at approximately $64,000 entering next week is positioned at exactly the level where the outcome of this Fed speech sequence will determine whether the $60,000-$70,000 range's 307-day consolidation resolves with a breakout or a retest of the lower boundary.
Disclaimer:
1. The information provided does not constitute investment advice. Investors should make independent decisions and bear all risks themselves.
2. The copyright of this content belongs to the original author. The views expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not represent the stance or position of this website.
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