In Brief
- The Fed kept rates at 3.50%–3.75% for a second meeting after last year’s 75 bp cuts, and flagged higher uncertainty from Middle East developments.
- Summary of Economic Projections (SEPs) left the policy path steady (one cut in 2026 and one in 2027), raised inflation to 2.7%, and nudged real GDP to 2.4%.
- For USD cash investors, markets are pricing a longer front-end plateau: short-tenor yields rose and the money-market curve flattened, signaling a continued income potential at the front end with stable market functioning.
Introduction
The Federal Reserve kept the federal funds target range at 3.50%–3.75% for a second consecutive meeting, emphasizing a meeting‑by‑meeting, data‑dependent approach amid elevated geopolitical uncertainty tied to developments in the Middle East. While not the base case, Chair Powell noted that a hike “did come up” at the meeting, even though the vast majority do not see a hike as their baseline. The Committee is keeping its options open, and policy remains data-dependent. That remark, alongside stickier near-term inflation projections, was among the notable drivers of the post-meeting rate selloff.
Market Reaction and Strategy
Front‑end easing that had been priced for this year has been pushed out, with markets effectively anticipating a longer plateau. Treasury bills sold off after the statement and the press conference, pushing longer bill yields above the rest of the money market curve – a marked shift from January’s FOMC pricing, when forwards implied a first 25 bp cut in July and roughly 50 bp by 2026. In this backdrop, selective opportunities have emerged to add fixed‑rate duration in Government and Treasury‑style funds while maintaining robust overnight and weekly liquidity buffers.
Conclusion
Rates held; Treasury bills sold off; uncertainty remains elevated due to Middle East developments and higher energy costs. For USD cash investors, the environment favors liquidity first, disciplined credit selection, and measured extensions in high‑quality fixed‑rate instruments—keeping portfolios flexible as the data evolve.