
- Wednesday’s Fed FOMC meeting lands at a fragile moment for markets.
- Consensus is that the Fed will keep rates unchanged as policymakers digest the fallout from the Middle East conflict and stubbornly high inflation.
- Investors will scrutinize the updated “dot plot” as well as comments from Fed Chair Jerome Powell for hints on the central bank’s next move.
All eyes will be on the this Wednesday as it concludes its highly anticipated two-day FOMC policy meeting at 2:00 PM ET.
Source: Investing.com
While the decision on interest rates is widely considered a foregone conclusion, the real market-moving events will be the release of the updated Summary of Economic Projections, including the closely watched “dot-plot,” and the nuanced messaging from Chair Jerome Powell in his press conference.
This meeting occurs against a complex and concerning backdrop of resurgent energy prices and renewed fears of stagflation, the toxic mix where growth stalls but prices keep climbing, making the Fed’s communication more critical than ever.
Here’s what to watch and how markets could react.
- The Certainty: A “Hawkish Hold” – The market universally expects the Fed to keep the federal funds rate at its current 3.50%-3.75% target range. The focus, therefore, will not be on the decision itself, but on the stance accompanying it.
The U.S. central bank is poised to deliver a “hawkish hold”—maintaining rates while signalling an unwavering commitment to fighting inflation and pushing back against market expectations for imminent rate cuts.
- The Key Variable: The Dot-Plot – The updated dot-plot, which charts FOMC members’ interest rate projections, will be the star of the show. In December, the median dot indicated just one 25-basis-point rate cut for all of 2026. The critical question is whether this median view will be revised.
Investors have already significantly pared back easing bets for this year, now pricing in potentially zero cuts in 2026 as the Fed grapples with persistent inflation pressures amid the fallout from the Iran conflict.
Source: Investing.com
The new dot-plot is likely to reflect this shift. A reduction from one cut to zero would be interpreted as decidedly hawkish and could rattle markets.
What to Expect from Powell’s Press Conference
Fed Chair Powell’s press conference will be the market’s hunting ground for clues: Is the Fed more worried about persistent , or about the risk of economic stall-out as stagflation fears rise?
Oppenheimer and other strategists anticipate Powell to reiterate a “wait and see” approach. As such, he will likely explicitly state that it is “too early” to think about rate cuts given the current environment.
The dominant backdrop is the ongoing Middle East turmoil, which has driven a more than 40% surge in crude prices since late February. hovers near $105 per barrel, with around $95.
Source: Investing.com
This energy shock is already feeding into consumer prices and is expected to push headline inflation toward or above 3% for 2026. could see modest pass-through as well.
This scenario leaves the Fed with conflicting mandates: cutting rates would risk fuelling inflation, while holding steady, or even hiking rates, could exacerbate growth weakness.
How Markets Could React
Stock Market: A hawkish dot-plot (signalling fewer cuts) and Powell’s firm tone could spark a sell-off, particularly in rate-sensitive growth and tech stocks. The market has been fuelled by hopes for easing policy; a cold dose of reality from the Fed could trigger a sharp correction.
Source: Investing.com
A hold on the dot-plot and a less aggressive Powell could provide relief.
The U.S. Dollar: A hawkish Fed is unequivocally bullish for the . Higher-for-longer rates increase the yield advantage of holding dollar-denominated assets, attracting foreign capital.
Source: Investing.com
The index could break out to new yearly highs.
- Treasuries: Hawkish signals will send yields soaring, particularly on the shorter end of the curve (). The , sensitive to growth and inflation expectations, could also climb further, testing its recent highs.
- Gold: faces a clash of forces. Typically, higher real yields and a stronger dollar are major headwinds for the non-yielding metal, suggesting a decline. However, if stagflation fears intensify significantly, gold could find a bid in its role as a safe-haven and inflation hedge, potentially muting its losses.
Bottom Line
In summary, Wednesday’s FOMC meeting is unlikely to deliver fireworks on the rate itself, but the updated projections and Powell’s messaging could reshape 2026 expectations in a high-stakes environment of energy shocks and stagflation risks. Markets will be listening closely for any shift in the Fed’s balancing act between growth and inflation.
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Disclosure: This is not financial advice. Always conduct your own research.
At the time of writing, I am long on the S&P 500, and the Nasdaq 100 via the SPDR® S&P 500 ETF, and the Invesco QQQ Trust ETF. I am also long on the Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF. I regularly rebalance my portfolio of individual stocks and ETFs based on ongoing risk assessment of both the macroeconomic environment and companies’ financials.
The views discussed in this article are solely the opinion of the author and should not be taken as investment advice.
Follow Jesse Cohen on X/Twitter @JesseCohenInv for more stock market analysis and insight.