Oil Price Surges, Inflation Rekindled: Will the Fed's Next Move Be a Rate Hike?

By: blockbeats|2026/03/16 10:00:05
0
Share
copy
Original Title: "An Unthinkable Question Just Weeks Ago: Will the Fed Hike Rates Next?"
Original Author: Dong Jing, Wall Street News

As fuel prices have surged since the outbreak of the Iran conflict, a question that was almost unthinkable just weeks ago has emerged: Will the Fed's next move be a rate hike?

The financial markets are beginning to entertain this possibility. Traders in the derivatives market are pricing in about a 25% probability of a rate hike this year. This shift in expectations highlights the direct impact of geopolitical conflicts on the global energy market and inflation outlook, prompting investors to repricing the Fed's policy path.

While most economists expect the Fed to stay put at the upcoming meeting, the discussion of a rate hike is no longer off the table.

Analysts argue that this development has not only shattered the market's widespread expectation of further Fed rate cuts but has also injected a high level of uncertainty into the future monetary policy trajectory, directly affecting bond yields and stock market risk appetite.

Fed officials will convene for the monetary policy meeting on March 17-18. The market will be closely watching Powell's remarks for any clue about the future rate path.

Inflation Worries Reignite, Calls for Rate Hike Emerge

The surge in oil prices has directly raised inflation expectations, prompting some market participants to call for Fed tightening.

Chief Economist at High Frequency Economics, Carl Weinberg, believes the Fed should hike rates at the upcoming meeting. He predicts that by this summer, oil prices will drive the Fed's favored inflation gauge—the Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index (PCE)—to a 3.5% annual rate.

"The Fed's job is to minimize the risk of the worst outcome, namely, price acceleration above the target," Weinberg wrote in a report to clients.

He added:

"Even if the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) does not hike rates next week—we now refuse to rule out the possibility—officials will certainly discuss the issue, and we expect Mr. Powell to let us know at his press conference."

Despite the calls for a rate hike, most economists do not expect the Fed to take action in the short term. Given the uncertainty brought by the war, nearly all economists expect the Fed to adopt a 'wait-and-see' approach.

Former Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan Urges Fed to Be Patient, Says, "I have a strange feeling that by the end of March, the situation will look different than it does now."

Former Fed senior official Vincent Reinhart also noted that the majority within the Fed still leans toward easing monetary policy, "but not in a hurry." He believes, "The events in the Middle East have not changed this direction, only giving you more reasons to wait."

Additionally, Deutsche Bank's Chief U.S. Economist Matthew Luzzetti pointed out that a prerequisite for hiking rates is for the labor market to not only bounce back but to strengthen. However, the U.S. labor market has been struggling, adding only an average of 6,000 jobs in the past three months.

Finding Signals of a Policy Shift

While the Fed is likely to keep rates unchanged, economists will be closely watching for any signals about the Fed's next move.

James Egelhof, Chief U.S. Economist at BNP Paribas Securities, said he will be watching whether Fed officials will change their language to indicate whether they plan to cut or raise rates in the coming months.

The Fed's standard script calls for officials to "look through" the oil price shock or treat it as temporary because inflation related to rising oil prices will not persist.

However, Egelhof noted that given the persistently high inflation seen since 2021, Fed officials will be deeply divided on whether to take this approach.

Comerica's Chief Economist Bill Adams agreed that the Fed will signal an openness to both raising and lowering rates. He said:

"If inflation is at the 2% target level, the Fed's concerns about credibility and anchoring inflation expectations would be less than they are now."

Adams pointed out that policymakers may signal that they will use tools to prevent energy price shocks from translating into a rise in trend inflation rates. "This is a conditional willingness to hike, but not a signal of imminent rate hikes."

Original Article Link

You may also like

Former ByteDance employee's account: How I started with two Pinduoduo hard drives and made six times the profit with Seagate to achieve financial freedom?

A programmer from a big tech company bought hard drives on Pinduoduo and, following clues, managed to accurately capture the sixfold rising stock Seagate using the "finding daily anomalies + 13F institutional verification" framework, making a wild profit of $400,000 and achieving financial freedom.

MiCA reshuffle begins, Binance temporarily bids farewell to the EU

What Binance leaves behind is not scattered retail investors, but a whole batch of high-value users who are forced to liquidate and have almost nowhere to go.

How does Gate redo "buying and selling stocks" from the cryptocurrency world to the stock market?

The competition logic of exchanges has changed.

Visa and Mastercard join 140 giants to launch a new stablecoin, but the impact on the market landscape may still be limited

As an important milestone event in the stablecoin landscape, OUSD is likely to change the existing stablecoin landscape and significantly increase the adoption rate of stablecoins in the global financial system.

Circle CEO responds to OUSD's challenge: Stablecoins are a winner-takes-all business, and we will not slow down

OUSD was jointly launched by more than 140 giants, causing Circle's stock price to plummet in a single day. Circle's CEO personally wrote a response, clarifying USDC's moat from three aspects: network effects, liquidity, and regulation, and dismantling OUSD's three selling points of "free redemption...

Argentina vs Cape Verde: When a Record-Breaking Legend Meets an Unbreakable Underdog

WEEX exclusive pre-match analysis of Argentina vs Cape Verde, exploring Messi-led Argentina’s dominance and Cape Verde’s historic defensive breakout, with a breakdown of volatility, structure, and match dynamics.

Popular coins

Latest Crypto News

Read more
iconiconiconiconiconiconicon
Customer Support:@weikecs
Business Cooperation:@weikecs
Quant Trading & MM:bd@weex.com
VIP Program:support@weex.com