(P1) The Euro fell to a one-month low against the US dollar as traders unwound bets for interest rate cuts, with market odds now pointing to a 27 percent chance the Federal Reserve’s next move is a hike.
(P2) "Monetary policy is in a ‘good place’ right now," New York Federal Reserve President John Williams said Thursday. "I don’t see there’s any reason at all to raise rates right now or lower rates right now."
(P3) The policy-sensitive two-year Treasury yield held firm, while the EUR/USD exchange rate touched its lowest point since mid-April. The shift in sentiment follows data showing US consumer price inflation accelerated to 3.8 percent in April, the highest since May 2023. According to prediction market Kalshi, the probability of a rate hike before 2027 has climbed to 27 percent from just 18.2 percent one month ago.
(P4) The data traps the Federal Reserve between two risks: keeping rates steady and allowing inflation to re-accelerate, or raising them and potentially slowing the economy further. With the federal funds target rate currently in a range of 3.5 percent to 3.75 percent, the path forward depends heavily on whether price pressures prove persistent.
The repricing comes after the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that a 3.8 percent rise in energy prices accounted for roughly 40 percent of April's headline inflation increase. Higher energy costs, driven by geopolitical instability in the Middle East, act as a tax on the economy and are difficult for the central bank to control with monetary policy, as the Fed cannot directly address supply shocks.
While Fed officials like Williams project a steady hand, investors are increasingly preparing for tighter financial conditions. The latest inflation report has directly challenged the market’s year-long assumption that a series of rate cuts was inevitable. This has created a complex picture for interest-rate sensitive assets. For example, even as the Fed holds a hawkish line, the average long-term US mortgage rate recently decreased to 6.36 percent after two weekly increases, showing different parts of the economy are reacting at different speeds.
For investors, the key takeaway is that the Federal Reserve may have significantly less flexibility than previously assumed. If energy-driven inflation continues to climb, the conversation could shift entirely from the timing of cuts to the possibility of another rate hike.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.