Ditching Rate Cut Hopes: The Fed's Hawkish Stance Emerges, Opening the Door to Hikes

Stock News
Jun 15

This week's Federal Reserve meeting could mark a pivotal shift in monetary policy, with officials likely to abandon their dovish stance and clarify that interest rate cuts are no longer the expected path forward.

The upcoming June FOMC meeting is expected to be a major turning point. The central bank is anticipated to remove any reference to an "accommodative" policy bias from its official statement, making it clear that lowering rates is not the preset course for monetary policy.

Recent data indicates that inflation is accelerating and the labor market continues to improve, despite high geopolitical uncertainty. Since the second half of 2025, markets have been captivated by a narrative of imminent Fed rate cuts. However, entering 2026, economic data has consistently shattered those expectations.

Ahead of the June FOMC meeting, the interest rate level implied by federal funds futures is significantly higher than the median projection from the March dot plot. This suggests market investors believe, earlier and more firmly than Fed officials themselves, that rates will not fall soon and may even rise further.

Meanwhile, other major global central banks are not waiting for the Fed. The European Central Bank raised rates on June 11 and is expected to hike its overnight rate again as soon as October. The Bank of Japan is reportedly expected to hike on June 16. The Reserve Bank of Australia has already raised rates twice in 2026.

To avoid a weaker dollar and a surge in long-term rates, the Fed will likely be compelled to drop the accommodative language from its policy statement. Compared to March, the dot plot in the June Summary of Economic Projections is expected to shift notably toward a more hawkish outlook.

The March dot plot showed a median overnight rate projection of 3.4%. This week's update is highly likely to revise that figure upward, especially given that markets are already pricing in higher rates: the December federal funds futures contract is trading around 3.8%. The 2027 median projection of 3.1% also faces an upward revision, with current futures at 3.9%, while the 2028 median of 3.1% is being pushed by markets to 4.05%.

The Fed may also raise its forecasts for both overall and core PCE inflation while lowering its unemployment rate expectations, signaling a shift in policy focus from supporting the labor market to containing inflation.

Core Inflation is Gaining Momentum

It's not just overall inflation on the rise; accelerating U.S. core inflation is the real concern. The three-month and six-month annualized rates for core CPI are 3.2% and 3.1% respectively, well above the year-over-year increase of 2.9%, and the trend is worsening. The same pattern holds for core PCE—the three-month, six-month, and annual rates are all moving notably higher.

In fact, core PCE readings are hotter than core CPI: the three-month and six-month annualized rates are both around 3.8%, far above the 2% target. This isn't simply a case of high oil prices driving overall inflation, with core inflation expected to fall sharply once energy costs retreat.

The "trimmed mean PCE" measure, which excludes specific components, is currently showing some divergence but typically lags behind core PCE. It lagged during the core inflation surge in 2021 and the subsequent decline in 2022. Therefore, trimmed mean PCE readings are highly likely to increase in the coming months.

Focus on Labor Market Support Should Fade

Furthermore, as the job market has shown signs of stabilization in recent months, the Fed no longer needs to primarily focus on employment weakness and can shift its attention back to inflation. As of the end of April, the number of job openings exceeded the number of unemployed persons, with the ratio above 1 for the first time since May 2025.

Simultaneously, data from three sources—the Bureau of Labor Statistics, ADP, and Revelio Labs—all indicate that hiring activity in the U.S. is rebounding, with employment steadily increasing after hitting a low at the end of 2025.

This doesn't mean the Fed should aggressively hike rates, but it suggests the Fed should begin signaling that the rate-cutting cycle is over and the next significant policy move will be a rate increase. New Fed Chair Kevin Warsh will convey this message during the press conference, but this is a high-wire balancing act that took his predecessor years to master.

Language perceived as too dovish could weaken the dollar and roil bond markets; language seen as too hawkish could anger the current administration that nominated him. The Fed's credibility and the necessity of anchoring inflation expectations hang in the balance. To achieve both, the Fed may have no choice but to start preparing markets for the possibility that the next move is a hike, not a cut.

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