Markets move to price in rate hikes as inflation fears and geopolitics reshape Fed expectations
Middle East tensions have driven divergences across asset markets as oil stays elevated and traditional safe havens falter.
What to know:
- Markets have flipped from pricing in multiple Fed rate cuts to expecting rate hikes thanks to energy-led inflation fears.
- Oil remains elevated, gold has fallen sharply despite its safe-haven status, and U.S. equities have weakened. Bitcoin has outperformed, but only in the very short term.
In this article
A “180” hardly does justice to the recent shift in market expectations regarding central bank monetary policy.
Expecting multiple Federal Reserve rate cuts in 2026 just weeks ago, markets have seriously begun to price in rate hikes this year.
Current pricing on CME FedWatch Tool shows nearly a 30% chance that the fed funds rate will be higher to end the year than its current level of 3.50%-3.75%. The odds that rates might go lower, meanwhile, have crashed to 2.9%.
The shift has been driven largely by renewed inflation fears tied to energy markets. Since the escalation of tensions in the Middle East at the end of February, the price of Brent Crude oil has risen from about $70 per barrel to its current level of $111. That’s helped send yields at the long end of the Treasury curve sharply higher, the 10-year yield rising to the current 4.40% from below 4% weeks ago.
“Food and energy prices are tragically going to climb and remain high for a while, at least until the utter mess of Middle East shipping is sorted out,” according to Crypto is Macro Now Newsletter. “Even if a peace deal were to be agreed tomorrow (unlikely), that would take months at best.”
