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Inside the personal finances of Kevin Warsh, Trump’s pick to be the next Fed chair

The next Fed chair may be one of the wealthiest men to ever hold the job.

Kevin Warsh, a financier and bank executive nominated by President Donald Trump to be Chairman of the Federal Reserve, is worth well over $100 million, according to a financial disclosure made public on Tuesday.

That would make him significantly wealthier than current chair Jerome Powell, who has previously been considered the wealthiest Fed chair since the 1940s.

The disclosures show that Warsh has earned $13.1 million in consulting fees from various investment firms since the beginning of 2025, including $10.2 million alone from Duquesne Family Office, the private investment firm of billionaire Stanley Druckenmiller.

He also made more than $1.5 million from 11 paid speeches from January to July 2025, mostly to financial institutions.

Warsh’s disclosures also list an investment in the prediction market platform Polymarket via an entity called “DCM Investments 10 LLC.”

It’s unclear how big Warsh’s investment in Polymarket is, but it’s likely not large: The LLC’s total value is listed as up to $500,000, and it includes investments in more than 250 other companies, including SpaceX.

Interestingly, much of Warsh’s investments remained undisclosed, due to apparent confidentiality agreements.

The disclosure lists two assets called “Juggernaut Fund, LP” that are each worth at least $50 million, along with roughly 60 assets associated with THSDFS LLC that are worth at least $22 million.

Accompanying each of those listings is a note: “Underlying assets are not disclosed due to pre-existing confidentiality agreements. I will divest this asset if confirmed.”

The disclosures also include some details about the personal finances of Warsh’s wife, Jane Lauder, a member of the billionaire family behind the cosmetics giant Estée Lauder.

Her investments include more than $1 million in two petcare companies and a series of municipal bonds across the United States. She is worth $1.9 billion, according to Forbes.

Warsh is set to receive a hearing in the Senate soon. But despite receiving a warm reception from GOP senators, and his previous tenure on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors from 2006 to 2011, he faces an uncertain path to becoming Fed chair.

That’s because one GOP senator, Thom Tillis of North Carolina, has moved to block consideration of Warsh’s nomination until the Trump administration drops its probe into Powell.




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FCC Chair Brendan Carr responds to Stephen Colbert, calling incident ‘Democrat on Democrat violence’

Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr said it’s “fake news” to suggest that the government pressured CBS to pull a Democratic lawmaker’s interview from Stephen Colbert’s “The Late Show” earlier this week.

Carr addressed the latest flash point moment between broadcasters and the FCC in his Wednesday remarks during the commission’s February open meeting, saying there was “no censorship by the government here.”

Speaking to Fox News’ Laura Ingraham on Wednesday evening, Carr doubled down, describing the incident as “Democrat on Democrat violence,” rather than evidence that the commission had pressured CBS not to air the interview.

Instead, Carr said, CBS’s advice to “The Late Show” not to air an interview with James Talarico, a Democratic Texas state representative running for a hotly contested US Senate seat, was an appropriate response to prevent the commission from enforcing its equal time rule.

The equal time rule requires TV and radio broadcast stations to provide equivalent airtime opportunities to legally qualified political candidates, or risk fines or, potentially, the revocation of their broadcast license. The rule does not apply to bona fide newscasts, interviews, or on-the-spot news.

The rule has rarely been applied in recent decades. Broadcasters had generally understood a 2006 FCC ruling to mean that interviews on daytime and late-night talk shows were exempt from the rule. However, the FCC said in revised guidance sent to stations last month that “This is not the case.”

“Perhaps Colbert and other establishment Democrats want to put the thumb on the scale in this Democrat primary for one candidate over the other,” Carr told Ingraham. “I don’t know, you’ll have to ask them, but we’re going to enforce the law and hold broadcasters accountable.”

Carr told reporters during the FCC’s open meeting that the commission was pursuing “enforcement actions” against the talk show “The View” over its broadcast of an interview with Talarico.

“What we’re doing now is simply applying the law on the books in an even-handed manner, and for people that benefited from a two-tier system of justice during the Biden years, they may feel like that’s weaponization, but that doesn’t make it so,” Carr told Ingraham.

Representatives for Fox News, CBS, The Late Show, and the campaigns of Talarico and primary opponent Jasmine Crockett did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Business Insider. The FCC pointed to Carr’s remarks during the open meeting when reached for comment.

CBS previously said in a statement that it did not specifically prohibit “The Late Show” from broadcasting the interview, but that it did provide the show with legal guidance.

Colbert, who has hosted “The Late Show” since 2015, told his viewers on Monday that CBS lawyers said “in no uncertain terms” that his late-night talk show could not air the interview with Talarico. He also said he was told not to acknowledge the decision on air, which prompted his decision to post the interview on YouTube.

By the time of Carr’s appearance on The Ingraham Angle, Colbert’s interview with Talarico had received more than 3.8 million views — significantly more than other recent interviews, which average between about 75,000 and 510,000 views.

Rep. Crockett, a Democrat running against Talarico, said during a Tuesday appearance on “The Briefing with Jen Psaki” likely gave her primary rival a “boost.”

In a Wednesday social media post, Talarico’s campaign confirmed that the fervor around the incident had a positive effect, saying it had raised $2.5 million in 24 hours after the Colbert interview was scrapped.




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Brad Karp stepped down as chairman of Paul Weiss

Brad Karp steps down as chair of Big Law firm Paul Weiss after Epstein scrutiny


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  • Brad Karp stepped down as chairman of Big Law firm Paul Weiss on Wednesday amid scrutiny over Epstein ties.
  • Scott Barshay was named the new chairman of the global firm, which has more than 1,000 attorneys.
  • Karp is among the elite names to appear in 3 million documents released by the Justice Department last week.

Brad Karp stepped down as chairman of Big Law firm Paul Weiss on Wednesday amid scrutiny over his ties to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Scott Barshay was named the new chairman of the global firm, which has more than 1,000 attorneys, “effective immediately,” the firm said in a news release.

“Leading Paul, Weiss for the past 18 years has been the honor of my professional life,” Karp was quoted as saying in the release. “Recent reporting has created a distraction and has placed a focus on me that is not in the best interests of the firm.”

The shakeup comes two days after Paul Weiss said in a statement, as reported by The New York Times, that Karp “attended two group dinners in New York City” with Epstein and “had a small number of social interactions by email, all of which he regrets.”

Karp is among the elite names to appear in 3 million documents released by the Justice Department last week from its investigation into Epstein, who killed himself in jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges.

He has been at Paul Weiss for four decades and has been chair of the firm since 2008. “Mr. Karp will continue to focus his full-time attention to client service at the firm,” the release said.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.




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What leading voices in economics and business are saying about Kevin Warsh’s nomination as Fed chair

  • Kevin Warsh has been nominated by President Donald Trump to become the Federal Reserve chair.
  • The reaction from key voices in economics and business poured in soon after the announcement.
  • Most people agree that Warsh is a qualified pick, while some have concerns about his track record.

President Donald Trump has chosen Kevin Warsh, a former bank executive and central bank governor, to lead the Federal Reserve.

Within minutes of the nomination, reactions started pouring in from prominent economists and business leaders.

Here are what some of the leading voices in economics and business are saying.

Mohamed El-Erian

Mohamed El-Erian is one of the most prominent voices in global markets and economics.

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The renowned economist Mohamed El-Erian congratulated Warsh on his nomination to lead the Fed.

“Having observed and interacted with Kevin during his prior tenure as Fed Governor, in academia, and as a fellow member of the Group of Thirty (G-30), I believe he brings a strong mix of deep expertise, broad experience, and sharp communication skills,” El-Erian wrote in a post on X.

“His commitment to reforming and modernizing the Fed bodes well for enhancing policy effectiveness and protecting the institution’s political independence.”

Earlier in January, El-Erian wrote on X that the Department of Justice probe into Jerome Powell could undermine the “credibility of a Fed whose public standing is already fragile.”

Jason Furman


Jason Furman, American economist and professor at the Harvard Kennedy School, speaks to an audience while seated.

Jason Furman, a Harvard economist and former chair of President Barack Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers

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Jason Furman, a Harvard economist and former top economist to President Barack Obama, wrote on X that “Warsh is well above the bar on both substance and independence to be Chair of the Federal Reserve.”

“The Senate should ask tough questions about his independence & President Trump should reduce the threat to it. Hopefully that will make it clear Warsh should be confirmed,” he wrote.

“Warsh has a range of views that would not have led me to recommend a Democratic President nominate him as Federal Reserve Chair,” Furman added. “I would be thrilled if he ends up conducting himself over the next four years in a way that would make a President of any party want to reappoint him.”

Joseph Brusuelas

Joseph Brusuelas, principal and chief economist for RSM US LLP, said Warsh meets the bar to lead the Fed, but he should be questioned on central bank independence and reform, as well as on reducing the Fed’s balance sheet.

“Moreover, he should be challenged to how he would respond in a financial crisis given his public track record of focusing on inflation risk during a time of rising unemployment and deflation during the early portion of the Great Financial crisis,” Brusuelas wrote on X.

“Warsh has a range of views and track record that presents significant concerns about how he would proceed during a financial and economic crisis. I would not have recommended him but he is qualified for the job,” he added.

Robin Brooks


Robin Brooks, former Institute of International Finance chief economist and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution speaks on a panel against a blue backdrop.

Robin Brooks, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.

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Robin Brooks, senior fellow at Brookings, said in an X post that Warsh “is a really good pick for Fed Chair and known as a hawk.”

He did, however, note the muted market reaction in the minutes after the announcement.

“But markets are asking themselves what was promised to get the nod, which is why the Dollar – after its huge decline in recent days – isn’t managing to rally on what should be good news,” said Brooks, who was also a managing director and chief economist at the Institute of International Finance.

Paul Krugman


Paul Krugman, economist and winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, speaks at a panel against a grey backdrop.

Paul Krugman was awarded the 2008 Nobel Prize in economics.

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Paul Krugman, a Nobel Prize-winning economist and research professor at the City University of New York’s Graduate Center, criticized Warsh’s nomination.

He wrote in a post on his Substack: “As I write this, many media reports are describing Warsh as a monetary hawk. That’s a category error. Warsh is a political animal. He calls for tight money and opposes any attempt to boost the economy when Democrats hold the White House.”

Krugman cited Warsh’s track record as a member of the Federal Reserve Board, saying he had “argued strenuously against the Fed’s efforts to boost the economy.”

“It’s a humiliating day for the Federal Reserve, which has always prided itself on its professionalism and has been hugely respected around the world. But even the Fed can’t insulate itself from the derangement sweeping America,” he added.

Sonali Basak

Sonali Basak, the chief investment strategist for iCapital and a former Bloomberg anchor, wrote on X: “Between Bessent & Warsh, you have two proteges of Stanley Druckenmiller in the most powerful finance posts in government.”

Warsh is a partner at billionaire Druckenmiller’s Duquesne Family Office LLC.

George Osborne


George Osborne, head of OpenAI for Countries and former UK chancellor, gestures while speaking to a person turned away from the camera.

George Osborne leads the OpenAI for Countries program.

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George Osborne, the UK’s former Chancellor of the Exchequer, praised Trump’s decision to nominate Warsh as Fed chair.

“Kevin Warsh is an excellent choice as Chair of the Fed – smart, serious, experienced, knows the new economy as well as the old,” Osborne, who leads OpenAI for Countries, wrote in a post on X.

“I’ve been fortunate enough to know him for more than twenty years and this is the job he was put on earth to do. The world feels a little safer – and more prosperous – today,” he added.

Alan Howard

Howard, the billionaire founder of $33 billion macro hedge fund Brevan Howard, called Warsh an “outstanding choice for Fed Chair.”

“I’ve known him for more than 20 years, and his judgment, integrity, and depth of experience will make him an exceptional leader of the Federal Reserve,” Howard said in a statement sent to Business Insider.

Raphael Bostic


Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic

Raphael Bostic leads the Atlanta Fed.

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Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic is optimistic about Warsh’s nomination. He told CNBC’s ‘Squawk Box‘ Friday that the nominee has a reputation for being “quite thoughtful” and “is someone you can really engage with.”

He added that the central bank’s independence is “always something that we need to protect.” He expects to see more “differing perspectives” on the FOMC if Warsh steps into the role, but it’s too early to tell how monetary policy could change.

“Every chair comes with its view of how the world is and how they think it is going to evolve,” Bostic said. “But, ultimately, the institution’s actions require the votes of twelve people at one time.”

Mark Zandi


Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, sits onstage at a panel against a backdrop which reads 'Prudential' and 'Yahoo Finance'.

Mark Zandi is chief economist at Moody’s Analytics.

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Mark Zandi, the top economist at Moody’s Analytics, wrote on X that Warsh was a “reasonable choice”.

Zandi said Warsh’s stint on the Fed and experience as an investment banker mean he “knows the institution and everyone in global central banking circles ” and is “well-versed in financial markets.”

However, Zandi said the key question is whether the former Wall Streeter will be able to keep politics out of interest rate decisions.

“Warsh’s ostensible views on the use of the Fed’s balance sheet or its data dependency are quirky, even odd, but his legacy as Fed chair will be determined by how much of the Fed’s independence he is able to preserve,” Zandi added.

Ray Dalio


Ray Dalio, founder of Bridgewater Associates, speaks onstage while seated against a red backdrop.

Ray Dalio is the founder of hedge fund Bridgewater Associates.

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Billionaire investor and Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio wrote on X that Warsh was a “great choice” for Fed chair.

“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,” Dalio said.

“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 and how to judge what’s too easy and what’s too tight,” he said, adding: “Presumably, he also knows how to deal with the president and the Treasury well.”




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