The Fed will almost certainly hold its meeting next week – here’s what’s still up in the air


  • The Federal Reserve is widely expected to keep its key interest rate on hold at a range of 3.5% to 3.75% at the end of its two-day meeting on Wednesday.

  • Policymakers will release their quarterly economic forecasts, showing how they expect inflation, economic growth, and other economic metrics to fare as a result of the Iran war.

  • The Fed has long been caught between the need to keep rates high to prevent inflation and lower them to stimulate spending and help the labor market.

With Federal Reserve policymakers almost certain to keep their key interest rate unchanged when they decide on monetary policy next week, the main question is how officials think about the Iran war and its impact on inflation.

The Federal Open Market Committee is widely expected to keep the federal funds rate in its current range of 3.5% to 3.75% when it concludes its two-day policy meeting on Wednesday. It will be the second meeting in a row that the central bank has kept rates flat after cutting rates by a quarter in its last three meetings through 2025 to reduce borrowing costs on any type of debt and dampen the labor market.

Financial markets are pricing in a greater than 99% chance the Fed will keep policy flat, according to CME Group’s FedWatch tool, which predicts price movements based on data from mutual fund futures trading.

The Fed has downplayed the prospect of cutting interest rates later this year, as the Iran war has pushed up gas prices and raised concerns about a broader wave of inflation.

Less predictable is a set of economic forecasts that policymakers will release along with the decision, showing their predictions for inflation, unemployment, and changes in the Fed funds rate at upcoming meetings. Those forecasts, along with Fed Chairman Jerome Powell’s post-meeting press conference, could shed light on whether the central bank will cut interest rates this year.

Markets have scaled back their expectations for a rate cut this year, and now consider the most likely scenario of a rate cut in October, compared to last month, when the first cut was expected for June. Businessmen fear that a war in Iran will stoke inflation and depress the labor market, threatening both sides of the Fed’s dual mission mandated by Congress: keeping inflation low and employment high.

Economists said the Fed would be reluctant to take any action in response to the war, given the wide uncertainty about how long it would last and whether the war’s disruption of oil supplies would eventually lead to higher energy prices. Fed officials’ forecasts will most likely acknowledge the fact that the war is likely to boost inflation, at least in the short term, Deutsche Bank economists led by Matthew Luzetti, chief economist, wrote in a commentary.

“Summary of Economic Estimates (SEP) should be little changed, except for upward revisions to headline and core PCE inflation for this year,” they wrote.

Even before the war broke out, the Fed was faced with the dilemma of whether to keep interest rates high long enough to stimulate borrowing and spending and inflation still firmly above the 2% annual rate, or lower rates to stimulate spending and hiring after the labor market shrinks significantly in 2025, raising dire concerns.

The Fed is also under intense political pressure. President Donald Trump this week renewed his repeated calls for a sharp cut in interest rates from the Fed, a stance the Fed has resisted amid concerns that low rates could stoke inflation.

“Where is Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome ‘Too Late’ Powell today?” Trump posted on his real social platform this week. “He should cut interest rates immediately, not wait for the next meeting!”

Trump’s point may be more useful later in May, when Powell’s term as Fed chairman ends and Trump’s pick, Kevin Warsh, takes over as chairman of the central bank’s board. Warsh has recently called for a rate cut, but it is not guaranteed to prevail, as he must convince a majority of the 12-person FOMC to vote for a rate move.

Additionally, Warsh’s appointment is still subject to approval by the Senate, where at least one powerful Republican lawmaker has vowed to block his nomination in protest of the Justice Department’s investigation into Fed and Powell.

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Federal Reserve Economic Estimates

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