Finance

Markets bet on Fed rate hike as soon as July

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on March 20, 2026

3 min read

· Last updated: April 1, 2026

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Markets bet on Fed rate hike as soon as July
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By Ann Saphir March 20 (Reuters) - Market pricing for a U.S. Federal Reserve interest-rate hike by September is about 75%, with better-than-even odds of a Fed rate hike as early as July. Five days ago

Market bets on Fed rate hike surge

Surging Expectations for Federal Reserve Rate Hike

By Ann Saphir

March 20 (Reuters) - Market pricing for a U.S. Federal Reserve interest-rate hike this year has shot up, and is now seen as far more likely than a rate cut.

Market Indicators and Futures Pricing

On Friday, interest-rate futures were pricing around a 25% chance of a rate hike by December, based on the CME FedWatch tool.

Trader Strategies and Payoff Terms

In payoff terms, a trader selling a December rate-futures contract at Friday's price -- effectively betting on a quarter-point rate hike -- stood to profit by roughly as much if the Fed tightens in December as a buyer betting against a hike would if it leaves rates unchanged.

Shift in Market Sentiment

Five days ago, the market had no hint of a rate-hike expectation at all this year, and indeed showed traders firmly believed the Fed's next move would be to reduce borrowing costs. That is a huge swing. As recently as last month, financial markets reflected expectations for as many as two interest-rate cuts by the end of the year.

Impact of Iran Conflict on Expectations

For the first couple of weeks of the Iran conflict that began on February 28, markets continued to think the Fed would ease policy, looking through the effect of higher oil prices. Fed policymakers largely echoed that view.

Fed Officials' Changing Stance

The reversal began this week as the Iran conflict escalated and Fed Chair Jerome Powell indicated he did not believe the risks to the job market outweighed risks to inflation. On Thursday and Friday, the shift gathered steam, particularly after Fed Governor Christopher Waller, an influential dovish voice at the central bank, said the risk of persistent inflation arising from the war with Iran was strong enough to convince him to cast his vote for keeping interest rates on hold this week, instead of cutting them as he had previously thought he would.

Market Reactions and Treasury Yields

Stocks have dropped and the yield on the two-year Treasury note - which closely tracks the direction of Fed policy - jumped. The two-year Treasury yield at the end of trading on Friday at 3.89% exceeded the Fed's effective daily policy rate by 25 basis points, the most it has done so in three years. That previous instance was more than a year into the Fed's aggressive tightening cycle in response to the inflation that erupted after the COVID-19 pandemic.

(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Rod Nickel)

Key Takeaways

  • Market-implied odds of a Fed rate hike by September are around 75%, and odds for a July hike have jumped above 50%, compared with near-zero expectations just days ago (Reuters, enriched by CME FedWatch data).
  • Rising oil prices and geopolitical risks, especially the Iran conflict, are fueling inflation concerns and prompting markets to reassess rate-cut expectations (sources such as AInvest, Kiplinger).
  • Short-term Treasury yields (e.g., 2-year note) have surged, reflecting the market’s repriced outlook for tighter monetary policy ahead (Treasury yield data from WaTrust and simulations).

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the current market expectations for a Fed rate hike?
As of March 20, market pricing shows about a 75% chance of a U.S. Federal Reserve interest-rate hike by September, with increasing odds for a hike as early as July.
How did market expectations change compared to last month?
Last month, markets expected two interest-rate cuts by year-end. Now, expectations have swung toward a potential rate hike due to recent developments.
What triggered the shift in Fed rate expectations?
The shift began as the Iran conflict escalated and comments from Fed policymakers, including Chair Jerome Powell and Governor Christopher Waller, indicated increasing concerns about inflation.
How have financial markets reacted to the change in expectations?
Stocks have dropped while the yield on the two-year Treasury note, which closely tracks Fed policy, has risen sharply in response to the potential rate hike.
Why did Fed Governor Christopher Waller change his stance?
Waller cited the risk of persistent inflation from the Iran conflict as a reason to vote for holding rates steady instead of cutting them as he previously anticipated.

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