WASHINGTON, Jan 30 (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday said he will nominate former Federal Reserve governor Kevin Warsh to return as Fed Chair in May, as the president continues his campaign for lower U.S. interest rates.
Here are five key things to know about Warsh:
YOUNGEST-EVER FED GOVERNOR, CRISIS-TESTED
Warsh, 55, joined the Fed Board of Governors in 2006 at age 35 as its youngest member after serving on former president George W. Bush’s National Economic Council. He remained at the Fed until 2011, playing a key role during the 2008-2009 global financial crisis to help then-chair Ben Bernanke engineer bailouts of failing financial institutions and financial market backstops. With his connections on Wall Street, he earned a reputation as the Fed’s financial market “whisperer.”
Warsh repeatedly warned that government rescues would jack up inflation, a threat that did not materialize. In fact, economists later said larger fiscal stimulus outlays after the crisis could have fueled a stronger recovery sooner.
Trump, always concerned with the appearance of his officials, especially on TV, on Friday called Warsh “central casting” for a Fed chair.
MARRIED TO A BEAUTY BRAND HEIRESS, HELPS PUPS
Warsh’s wife is cosmetics heiress Jane Lauder, whose net worth is estimated at $2.7 billion by Forbes. She previously served in various management roles at the family company founded by her grandmother, Estee Lauder, running the firm’s Clinique brand but stepping down as executive vice president in 2024.
Jane Lauder and Warsh invest time and money into improving pet wellness and longevity. In October, Lauder’s investment firm, TAW Ventures — named for their pet goldendoodle dog, Thaddeus Alistair Warsh — led a 2.5 million-pound ($3.4 million) funding round for the British fresh dog food brand Marleybones, which offers meals named Boss Beef, Chic Chicken, Lush Lamb and Sassy Salmon.
SURROUNDED BY BILLIONAIRES
Warsh, a graduate of Stanford University and Harvard Law School, started his career in the 1990s working in mergers and acquisitions at Morgan Stanley. After leaving the Fed in 2011, he joined Stanford University’s conservative Hoover Institution and has lectured at the Stanford Graduate School of Business.
Around the same time, he also began working for billionaire Stanley Druckenmiller as a partner at the investor’s Duquesne Family Office, helping to manage his fortune estimated at as much as $11 billion. Druckenmiller in the 1990s worked alongside Scott Bessent, now U.S. Treasury Secretary, to make a profit of over $1 billion for investor George Soros by betting against the British pound.


