Context
On March 23, 2026, San Francisco Federal Reserve President Mary Daly stated that "elevated uncertainty" in the macroeconomic outlook requires a scenario-based approach to monetary policy, remarks published by Investing.com on that date (Investing.com, Mar 23, 2026). Daly's formulation underscores a visible pivot in central-bank rhetoric from single-path guidance to explicitly probabilistic planning; the comment is notable given the Federal Reserve's long-standing 2% inflation objective (Federal Reserve, 2012). The change in language matters to institutional investors because it signals that the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) and regional presidents may increasingly discuss policy outcomes conditional on multiple, concurrent paths for growth, inflation and labor market dynamics. Such a shift carries implications for modelling, risk management and scenario-design frameworks across fixed income, rates-sensitive equities and cross-asset liquidity strategies.
Mary Daly has been President and CEO of the San Francisco Fed since October 2018 (Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco biography, Oct 2018), and her public remarks are watched for indications of regional Fed sentiment and its potential influence on FOMC deliberations. The FOMC conducts eight scheduled meetings per year, which remain the formal forum for policy decisions and for the public communication of projections and ranges; scenario-based rhetoric increases the emphasis on how the Fed communicates uncertainty between those meetings. For asset managers and institutional risk teams, this is not just semantic: it changes the calculus of tail-risk hedging and expected value computations when policy paths are presented as conditional distributions rather than central-point forecasts. The developing language therefore demands tighter integration between macro forecast teams and portfolio risk engines to translate Fed-level scenario talk into instrument-level exposures.
Given the Fed's dual mandate — price stability and maximum sustainable employment — the introduction of explicit scenario frameworks is a mechanism for reconciling competing signals from inflation and labor markets. Historically, the Fed has anchored around a 2% personal consumption expenditures (PCE) inflation target; that anchor remains intact even when the tactical approach to achieving it adjusts. In her March remarks Daly emphasized flexibility and the need to prepare for multiple plausible trajectories for inflation and growth, which is consistent with a central bank that retains an objective but acknowledges increased uncertainty in transmission mechanisms and supply-side shocks. For institutional investors, that implies a higher premium on stress-testing portfolios under asymmetric outcomes rather than relying solely on central-case forecasts.
Data Deep Dive
Daly's comment on March 23, 2026 (Investing.com, Mar 23, 2026) should be read alongside the institutional facts that define U.S. monetary-policy mechanics: the Fed's formal inflation objective is 2% PCE (Federal Reserve, 2012), the FOMC meets eight times annually, and regional presidents like Daly contribute to the debate through speeches and internal deliberations. These discrete facts anchor why a scenario-based approach carries operational significance: the Fed's communication cadence means that scenario narratives will show up in speeches, minutes and the Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) rather than as immediate, binding policy changes. The timing of Daly's remarks — in the inter-meeting period — emphasizes the role of public commentary in seeding those scenario narratives.
Quantitatively, scenario-based policy frameworks typically require a map from macro states to policy instruments. Practically, that means constructing conditional probability distributions for variables such as core PCE inflation, unemployment rate and the neutral real rate. Institutional-model builders will need to update priors for shock persistence and shock correlation structures. For example, when calibrating scenarios, risk teams often specify a central-case projection, a downside (recession) path and an upside (overheating) path with assigned probabilities; the explicit mention of a scenario approach from a senior Fed official increases the probability that market participants will price policy conditionality rather than a single-term expectation. That, in turn, affects term premia calibration and the implied path for the policy rate used in valuation models.
From a data perspective, the market response to scenario language is measurable across trading venues and instruments. While immediate intraday reactions vary, the larger effect is on the distribution of expected outcomes embedded in instruments such as interest-rate options, inflation swaps and forward-starting swaps. Scenario-based communications raise the value of convex hedges and insurance strategies because ambiguity amplifies the tails. Institutional managers should therefore expect a higher cost for delta-neutral hedges in environments where central-bank language elevates conditionality and uncertainty, and they should update valuation models for the potential shift in implied volatilities across tenors.
Sector Implications
The push toward scenario-based analysis has distinct implications across sectors. In fixed income, portfolio managers will need to re-run duration and convexity stress tests across multiple Fed-rate paths. Rising uncertainty typically increases term premium requirements, which can widen spreads in corporate credit markets by a measurable margin; investment-grade spreads and high-yield spreads have historically diverged by tens to hundreds of basis points in episodes of macro uncertainty. For rates-sensitive sectors in equities such as real estate investment trusts (REITs) and utilities, scenario-driven volatility necessitates a tighter focus on cash-flow duration and refinancing windows.
For banks and the broader financial-sector balance sheets, scenario planning affects provisioning, liquidity coverage ratios and capital allocation decisions. Stress tests that incorporate both macro and idiosyncratic shocks can produce materially different capital outcomes versus single-path stress scenarios. Corporate treasuries will face parallel decisions on cash buffers and hedging strategies because a conditional policy path could shift funding costs abruptly across the curve. Institutional investors operating across global markets must also consider cross-border spillovers: Fed scenario language influences global policy divergence expectations relative to peers such as the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan, which can drive FX volatility and capital-flow dynamics.
In derivatives and risk-transfer markets, the appeal of structured products that explicitly monetize views on scenario probability has grown. Dealers and institutional desks are already marketing tailored option structures and customized swaps that can monetize asymmetric views on inflation or growth. Where Daly's comments accelerate the acceptance of scenario framing, demand for bespoke risk-transfer instruments is likely to increase in the institutional space. That places a premium on dealer capacity and on counterparty-credit assessment across conditional payoff structures.
Risk Assessment
Scenario-based policy communication reduces model risk only if scenario generation is disciplined and probabilistically coherent. A meaningful risk for market participants is the proliferation of ad-hoc scenarios without rigorously defined probabilities, which can lead to misallocation of capital and mispriced hedges. Institutional investors should therefore insist on scenario construction that is transparent about assumptions concerning shock distributions, persistence and inter-variable correlation. Without these guardrails, scenario-based rhetoric can worsen rather than reduce forecasting error and downside exposure.
Another operational risk is model overfitting: portfolio teams that react to every shift in central-bank language by re-calibrating models may introduce noise into strategic decisions. Conversely, under-reacting risks exposure if the Fed’s scenario narratives represent a genuine change in framework. The prudent path for institutions is to set rules-based triggers for when scenario-language warrants tactical re-weighting: for example, when a set of high-frequency indicators crosses pre-defined thresholds or when the Fed updates the SEP with materially different distributional assumptions.
Finally, communication risk is non-trivial. Scenario-based frameworks require careful coordination between central-bank messaging and market interpretation. If communications are incomplete or inconsistent across Fed officials, markets can misinterpret partial remarks as policy intent, amplifying volatility. Institutional risk functions must therefore triangulate across primary-source Fed communications — official releases, minutes, and regional President speeches — rather than relying on single-speech interpretations.
Outlook
Over the next 12 to 24 months, the adoption of scenario-based language by Fed officials like Mary Daly suggests a period of greater explicit probabilistic framing in policy discussions. This will likely lead to broader use of conditional forecasts in the SEP and to more frequent references to downside and upside risks in post-meeting statements. For institutional investors, the near-term consequence will be a heavier emphasis on stress-testing, more frequent scenario runs and greater use of insurance instruments to manage fat-tail exposures. The degree to which this becomes operationally significant will depend on whether the Fed pairs scenario language with formal changes in disclosure (for instance, publishing scenario-weighted SEPs).
Market participants should prepare for increased dispersion in policy-impacted asset returns and for rising premia on volatility and liquidity. Scenario-based communication tends to converge on the central-case over time if the data adheres to expected patterns, but it can also entrench higher option-implied volatilities during periods of data ambiguity. From an allocation standpoint, investors may find value in systems that price cross-scenario resilience — i.e., portfolios that perform acceptably across a range of plausible macro states rather than optimized only for a narrow central forecast. For further methodological guidance on stress-testing and scenario design, institutional readers can consult our frameworks and research on [Fed policy](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and on multi-scenario portfolio construction at [Fazen Capital insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital views Daly's emphasis on scenario-based policy as a necessary evolution rather than a radical departure. The Fed's 2% objective remains the lodestar, but decision-making under higher uncertainty benefits from explicit scenario structures that map macro states to policy responses. Our contrarian insight is that scenario framing is likely to increase the relative value of liquidity buffers and flexible-duration instruments: in a world where conditional outcomes are more explicitly priced, liquidity becomes an option with non-linear payoffs. This is particularly relevant for large institutional mandates where drawdown tolerance and funding-liquidity overlap create second-order risks.
From a portfolio construction standpoint, the institutional implication is to build modular strategies that allow for tactical allocation shifts between scenario vertices rather than wholesale portfolio turnover. In practice, that means holding core exposures that are robust across scenarios and maintaining a set of satellite positions (options, forwards, short-duration credit) that can be scaled in or out as scenario probabilities evolve. We advise that scenario design include alternative calibrations for shock persistence — for example, comparing a temporary supply shock that decays over three quarters versus one that persists for two years — because those calibrations have very different implications for duration and credit spreads.
Operationally, Fazen Capital expects that scenario-aware investors will invest more in scenario governance: clear documentation of scenario assumptions, decision triggers tied to observable indicators, and a governance timetable for recalibration. Those practices reduce the risk of ad-hoc reactions to individual Fed speeches and instead convert scenario rhetoric into repeatable, auditable policy-response protocols. This is a suboptimality highlighted in prior episodes of reactive asset allocation and can be mitigated by disciplined scenario governance.
Bottom Line
Mary Daly's March 23, 2026 call for scenario-based policy underscores a shift toward explicit probabilistic thinking at the Fed, raising the premium on robust scenario design and liquidity-consistent portfolios. Institutional investors should re-examine stress-testing, hedging and governance frameworks to ensure resilience across multiple, plausible macro trajectories.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
FAQ
Q: How should institutional investors operationalize Fed scenario rhetoric without overreacting to each speech?
A: Use rules-based triggers tied to observable indicators (e.g., sequential PCE prints, unemployment rate moves, or SEP updates). Maintain a core-satellite approach: core allocations remain strategic while satellites — hedges, options, short-duration credit — are scaled by rule rather than discretion. Document scenario assumptions and review them on a fixed timetable to avoid ad-hoc rebalancing.
Q: Are there historical precedents for the Fed using scenario language, and what can we learn from them?
A: The Fed has historically used conditional language during periods of elevated uncertainty (e.g., the Global Financial Crisis and the COVID policy response), but widespread formalization of scenario-based communications is less common. Lessons include the importance of transparent probability assignments and of aligning risk-management systems to capture the transmission of conditional policy paths into market-implied pricing.
Q: What instruments are most effective for hedging against scenario-driven policy risk?
A: Instruments that monetize convexity and tail protection — such as interest-rate options, inflation swaps and forward-starting swaps — tend to perform in environments where conditional policy paths increase tail probabilities. Liquid short-duration government paper and cash buffers also provide optionality when policy outcomes diverge from central-case forecasts. Institutional portfolios should evaluate these tools in the context of cost, counterparty exposure and correlation with existing holdings.
