The Federal Reserve’s upcoming June 17 FOMC meeting is virtually guaranteed to result in unchanged interest rates. Market data from CME FedWatch indicates probabilities between 99.4% and 99.6% for a hold decision.
This marks the inaugural FOMC meeting under Kevin Warsh’s leadership following his appointment by President Donald Trump. Warsh assumes control during a challenging period where persistent inflation has significantly complicated the trajectory toward monetary easing.
Research conducted by CNBC involving 32 financial professionals—including economists, market strategists, and investment managers—revealed unanimous expectations for rate stability at the upcoming meeting. Additionally, consensus points to no adjustments extending throughout 2027.
However, forward-looking market pricing tells a different story. Data from the Kalshi prediction platform indicates 64% odds that the Federal Reserve will implement at least one rate increase before July 2027. This represents a substantial increase from projections made earlier in 2026.
Supporting evidence comes from Bank of America’s latest fund manager survey. Nearly 40% of participants now forecast at least one rate hike over the coming 12 months. This marks a dramatic rise from the 16% recorded just one month earlier. Meanwhile, only 28% anticipate rate reductions.
The primary catalyst behind shifting expectations is renewed inflationary pressure. US consumer price data for May showed a 0.5% monthly increase. Year-over-year calculations reveal inflation accelerating to 4.2%, representing a significant jump from April’s 3.8% reading.
Escalating oil prices have intensified inflationary concerns. Geopolitical friction between the United States and Iran has driven energy costs upward, generating anxiety about potential supply disruptions affecting the Strait of Hormuz shipping corridor.
The CNBC survey revealed that 88% of participants anticipate the Federal Reserve will remove forward guidance indicating rate cuts as the next probable action. This would signal a meaningful policy tone adjustment, even absent immediate rate modifications.
EY’s chief economist Gregory Daco commented to CNBC that Warsh “will inherit a committee that has become noticeably more hawkish,” despite Warsh’s personal reputation for dovish policy preferences.
Fed funds futures markets confirm this sentiment shift. Trading patterns no longer anticipate significant monetary easing over upcoming years, with expectations clustering around the current 3.62% rate level.
Cryptocurrency markets have demonstrated cautious responses to evolving rate expectations. Elevated interest rates typically redirect liquidity away from higher-risk investment categories, which includes digital currencies.
The Bank of Japan recently implemented a 25 basis point increase, bringing rates to 1%—the highest level witnessed in over three decades. Similarly, the European Central Bank raised rates by 25 basis points to 2.25%, marking its first increase since 2023.
A potential diplomatic agreement between the US and Iran, announced following the conclusion of the CNBC survey period, could provide relief on energy pricing. Should inflation moderate consequently, the Federal Reserve may gain additional flexibility regarding future policy directions.
Currently, both cryptocurrency and traditional financial markets remain focused on forthcoming FOMC communications for clarity regarding the central bank’s policy trajectory.
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