The Fed Just Held Rates — But 4 Officials Dissented. Here’s What That Means for Your Mone

April 29, 2026

On April 29, 2026, the Federal Reserve held interest rates steady at 3.5%–3.75%. That sounds boring. What’s not boring: four Federal Reserve officials publicly dissented — the highest level of internal disagreement in recent memory. That division tells you a lot about where rates are headed.

What the Fed Decided

3.5–3.75%
Fed funds rate (unchanged)
8–0–4
Vote (hold / hike / dissent)
4
Officials dissented (rare)

The 4 Dissenters — What They Actually Wanted

Official Lean What they wanted Why
Stephen Miran Dovish Cut 0.25% now Concerned about slowing job growth
Beth Hammack Hawkish Remove “easing bias” language Inflation still too high
Neel Kashkari Hawkish Remove easing bias language Premature to hint at cuts
Lorie Logan Hawkish Remove easing bias language Concerned about inflation persistence

One official wants cuts now. Three want to keep rates high longer. The majority voted to hold and wait. This is a Fed that doesn’t know what comes next — and is being honest about it.

What the Statement Actually Said

The Fed said economic activity is “expanding at a solid pace,” job gains “have remained low,” and inflation “is elevated, in part reflecting the recent increase in global energy prices.”

Translated: the economy is doing OK but not great. Job growth is slowing enough to notice. Inflation is still above the 2% target. The Middle East situation is adding uncertainty. The Fed is stuck between cutting rates (which risks inflation) and keeping rates high (which risks a slowdown). There’s no clean answer, which is why four officials broke from the consensus.

The Kevin Warsh Factor

Jerome Powell is likely done as Fed Chair — this was probably his final FOMC meeting. Kevin Warsh is expected to take over, and Warsh is significantly more hawkish than Powell. The three dissenting hawks just sent Warsh a message: we’re not sold on cutting rates, don’t expect us to support easy money going forward.

What this likely means: rate cuts are unlikely in 2026. The new Fed leadership will probably keep rates elevated to fight inflation. Mortgage rates staying around 6–7% is the base case, not a temporary anomaly.

What This Means for Your Money

Mortgage: Don’t expect rates to drop this year. If you’re thinking about refinancing, do it now rather than waiting for a drop that probably isn’t coming. Fixed-rate is safer than adjustable in this environment.

Savings: HYSA rates at 4–5% are historically good. Lock them in now via CDs if you can — rates could stay here or go higher, but they won’t stay here forever. A 6-month or 1-year CD ladder makes sense.

Investing: Broad index funds (VTI, VOO, FXAIX) remain the safest bet. Bonds are attractive again at current yields. Growth stocks face headwinds when rates stay high — future earnings are worth less when discounted at higher rates.

Job market: The Fed specifically noted “low job gains” — this is a warning sign. If you’re employed, negotiate now while leverage exists. If you’re job hunting, build your emergency fund first and move faster than you think you need to.


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