Markets abandon early Fed easing as oil and geopolitics lift inflation
Market expectations for early Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts have shifted sharply. In recent days traders have largely abandoned hopes for a June reduction in the federal funds rate, a view that had been common prior to the U.S.-Israel actions against Iran and the subsequent jump in oil prices toward $100 per barrel.
Key market pricing and data points
- CME FedWatch-led pricing: a June quarter-point cut that was widely priced earlier has been pushed out; many traders now view the earliest likely cut as December. Fed funds futures have removed a September cut from implied probabilities and show only a single cut penciled in for December.
- Inflation signal ahead of the Fed: the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index for January will be released before the next FOMC decision; consensus forecasts point to core PCE at about 3.1% year-over-year for January, up 0.1 percentage point from December and well above the Fed's 2% objective.
- Meeting calendar: the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will issue its next policy decision on March 18, with markets assigning near-100% odds to the committee holding the target range steady at that meeting.
- Oil prices: Brent crude has settled above $100 per barrel amid heightened Middle East tensions, increasing the likelihood of higher headline inflation and a rise in inflation expectations.
Why oil and geopolitics matter for Fed timing
Higher energy prices transmit to headline inflation directly and can feed into core inflation through higher transportation and production costs. A sustained rise in oil that pushes headline inflation and inflation expectations higher makes it more difficult for the Fed to justify easing policy early. When inflation is drifting above levels consistent with 2% core PCE, the FOMC faces a trade-off: cut early and risk rekindling inflation pressures, or wait for clearer, durable disinflation before easing.
Markets had factored in an easing path driven by three structural assumptions: (1) a softening labor market, (2) moderating inflation trends, and (3) a more dovish leadership stance at the Fed later in the year. With energy-driven inflationary pressure and geopolitical risk elevated, the first two conditions appear less certain, and investors have re-priced the likelihood and timing of cuts.
What analysts and market participants are saying
Market commentary has emphasized that a higher inflation trajectory will complicate the Fed's ability to start cutting rates soon. Some major banks have revised their rate outlooks, moving the first cut from June to September while retaining the view that an easing cycle could still occur later in 2026. These forecasts still leave room for one or more cuts before the end of the year if labor-market weakness materializes sooner than expected.
Other traders are more conservative: the fed funds futures strip now points to only one cut in December, with no additional easing priced in until 2027 or early 2028 in some scenarios. That pricing persists despite expectations that a presumptive new chair who favors easing will take office in May; the incumbent chair will leave in May with the next chair anticipated to influence the longer-term policy outlook.
Conditions that would re-open early cuts
Three developments could restore earlier rate-cut odds:
Analysts note that if the labor market softens substantially and quickly, a temporary spike in energy-driven inflation would be less likely to prevent the Fed from easing, provided inflation expectations remain well-anchored.
Market implications and trading considerations
- Fixed income: later-than-expected cuts push out the yield-curve repricing window. Traders should expect front-end yields to remain elevated until clearer signals of disinflation arrive.
- FX and carry trades: a delayed easing cycle typically supports the U.S. dollar versus peers priced for earlier cuts. Currency strategies should be adjusted for a higher-for-longer Fed stance.
- Equities: rate-sensitive sectors (real estate, utilities) may underperform if cuts are postponed; cyclicals tied to energy may see divergent impacts as higher oil lifts energy-sector earnings but pressures margins elsewhere.
Bottom line
As of this working market environment, higher oil prices and renewed geopolitical risk have materially reduced the probability of an early summer Fed rate cut. Core PCE prints that remain above 3% on an annual basis, combined with a tight labor market, make the case for the FOMC to keep policy restrictive for longer. Traders should monitor the January PCE release, fed funds futures pricing, and real-time oil-market developments; any durable easing in inflation or labor-market softness could quickly reopen the path to earlier cuts.
FOMC | CME | PCE
