#RateWatch


The U.S. central bank kept its key rate in the 3.50% to 3.75% band for the fourth straight meeting on Wednesday. That was the first policy call under new Chair Kevin Warsh, and while the rate itself did not move, the tone of the message did.
What changed?
1. From pause to hawkish tilt: The policy text dropped all prior language about future cuts. Nine of 19 officials now project at least one rate hike by the end of 2026, up from zero in March. Warsh told press the bank will “deliver on price stability,” and the Fed’s updated outlook lifted its 2026 core inflation view to 3.6% from 2.7%. 2. Warsh era begins: Warsh took the top job last month after Jerome Powell’s term ended. He did not submit a rate-path dot at this meeting and said he plans to slim down public guidance. Five task forces will review how the Fed sets policy and talks to markets. The aim is more room to react and less lock-in from forward cues. 3. Market reaction: Short-term Treasury yields jumped to a 16-month high. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq each fell more than 1% on the day. Traders now price roughly a 60% chance of a rate hike by January, with odds of a move as early as September rising fast. The dollar rose versus all major rivals as rate bets shifted. 4. Why the hawkish turn?: Officials point to supply shocks from the Iran conflict that pushed energy costs up. Even with oil easing after the U.S.-Iran deal, the Fed flagged that price pressure could persist. Some members worry that holding rates flat will not be enough to pull inflation back to the 2% goal. 5. Split inside the room: Eight officials still see rates holding steady through 2026, and only one expects a cut. One member did not submit a forecast. The spread shows debate: a few see a long hold as enough, while others think a hike may be needed if inflation stays firm.
What this means going forward
• No auto-pilot: The Fed removed hints about the next move. Policy will depend on data, with a bias toward tighter settings if inflation does not cool. • Bond market impact: Higher rate outlooks lift short-term yields and weigh on growth stocks. If the Fed does hike later this year, loan costs and credit card rates would climb further. • Global link: A stronger dollar and higher U.S. yields can pull capital from other markets. Oil’s slide after the Iran deal gave some relief, but the Fed said it is too soon to say that eases the inflation risk. • Watch list: The next dot plot and policy text will matter more than usual. Warsh may keep his own forecast quiet, so traders will read the group view and the tone of each meeting.
In short, rates stayed put, but the bias flipped. The Fed under Warsh is done promising cuts and is now open to lifting rates if price data stays hot.
US5000.77%
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#RateWatch
The U.S. central bank kept its key rate in the 3.50% to 3.75% band for the fourth straight meeting on Wednesday. That was the first policy call under new Chair Kevin Warsh, and while the rate itself did not move, the tone of the message did.

What changed?
1. From pause to hawkish tilt: The policy text dropped all prior language about future cuts. Nine of 19 officials now project at least one rate hike by the end of 2026, up from zero in March. Warsh told press the bank will “deliver on price stability,” and the Fed’s updated outlook lifted its 2026 core inflation view to 3.6% from 2.7%. 2. Warsh era begins: Warsh took the top job last month after Jerome Powell’s term ended. He did not submit a rate-path dot at this meeting and said he plans to slim down public guidance. Five task forces will review how the Fed sets policy and talks to markets. The aim is more room to react and less lock-in from forward cues. 3. Market reaction: Short-term Treasury yields jumped to a 16-month high. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq each fell more than 1% on the day. Traders now price roughly a 60% chance of a rate hike by January, with odds of a move as early as September rising fast. The dollar rose versus all major rivals as rate bets shifted. 4. Why the hawkish turn?: Officials point to supply shocks from the Iran conflict that pushed energy costs up. Even with oil easing after the U.S.-Iran deal, the Fed flagged that price pressure could persist. Some members worry that holding rates flat will not be enough to pull inflation back to the 2% goal. 5. Split inside the room: Eight officials still see rates holding steady through 2026, and only one expects a cut. One member did not submit a forecast. The spread shows debate: a few see a long hold as enough, while others think a hike may be needed if inflation stays firm.
What this means going forward
• No auto-pilot: The Fed removed hints about the next move. Policy will depend on data, with a bias toward tighter settings if inflation does not cool. • Bond market impact: Higher rate outlooks lift short-term yields and weigh on growth stocks. If the Fed does hike later this year, loan costs and credit card rates would climb further. • Global link: A stronger dollar and higher U.S. yields can pull capital from other markets. Oil’s slide after the Iran deal gave some relief, but the Fed said it is too soon to say that eases the inflation risk. • Watch list: The next dot plot and policy text will matter more than usual. Warsh may keep his own forecast quiet, so traders will read the group view and the tone of each meeting.
In short, rates stayed put, but the bias flipped. The Fed under Warsh is done promising cuts and is now open to lifting rates if price data stays hot.
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